Graphic Design Taschen Magazine 2006

Published on May 2016 | Categories: Documents | Downloads: 32 | Comments: 0 | Views: 680
of x
Download PDF   Embed   Report

Comments

Content


TASCHEN
$0MM0f Z00ë
PUBLISHERS OF ART,
ANTHROPOLOGY AND APHRODESIA
since 1980
Pages 30–31
Pages
26–29
Pages
42–43
Pages
22–25
Pages 38–41
Pages 32–35
Pages
18–21
Pages 6–13
Pages 14–17
Pages 48–49
Pages 44–45
Pages
46–47
Pages
36–37
Pages 50–51
| ë | "10l8 l8 8ß lß0l8#0ß880l0 9800M000M l0f l0080 lßl0f08l00 lß 00ß·
Opposite: Tim Noble and Sue Webster, Toxic Schizophrenia,
1997, 516 xlamps, holders, coloured UFO reflector caps,
foamex, aerosol paint, vinyl, 51 channel multi-functional
sequencer, 260 x 200 x 7 cm (102
3
⁄8 x 78
3
⁄4 x 2
3
⁄4 in.)
Courtesy of Stuart Shave/Modern Art London © Tim Noble
and Sue Webster
Whether you’re an art fan, aficionado, or collector, this
completely unique book should be on your required
reading list. Like a textbook for a class given by all of the
world’s leading experts, Collecting Contemporary is the
one and only book to teach you everything you ever
wanted to know about the contemporary art market.
The introduction explains the ABCs of buying art on the
primary and secondary markets, at auction, and at art
fairs, and gives an overview of the world art scene and its
social circles. The main body of the book brings together
tell-all interviews with the biggest players in the global
art market: critics, dealers, consultants, collectors, auction
house experts, and museum curators/directors. Rounding
up the book are chapters on the year in art collecting—
giving a timeline of the most important annual auctions,
exhibitions, fairs, etc. around the world—as well as a glos-
sary of terms every art savvy player should know. The text
is illustrated by the work of the hottest artists in today’s
market, including Matthew Barney, Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Damien Hirst, Mike Kelley, Martin Kippenberger,
Jeff Koons, Takashi Murakami, Richard Serra, Cindy
Sherman, Andy Warhol, Lisa Yuskavage, and many more.
These elements add up to the equivalent of an invaluable
and privileged real-world collector’s education—all
between the covers of one book.
The author: Adam Lindemann started collecting tribal
art as well as works of artists of the 80s before turning to
contemporary art, which has been his passion for the past
several years. This book was conceived as a short hand-
book of information and advice for new collectors, but
Lindemann’s research eventually led him to an interna-
tional tour of the art world and personal interviews with
some of its leading figures. The results are shared with
the reader on these pages—along with images of over a
hundred art works which help define the contemporary
art market today.
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
Adam Lindemann / Notebook-binding, format: 17 x 22.7 cm
(6.7 x 8.9 in.), 296 pp.
08lf 6 Z4.99 l $ Z9.99
£ 1ë.99 l f 4.900
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
N0f08 lf0M l00 Nl80
Insiders’ tips on how to navigate the art market like a pro
THE ART CRITIC
David Rimanelli
THE ART DEALER
Marianne Boesky
Bruno Brunnet and
Nicole Hackert
Sadie Coles
Jeffrey Deitch
Márcia Fortes
Larry Gagosian
Barbara Gladstone
Marc Glimcher
Max Hetzler
Gerd Harry Lybke
Emmanuel Perrotin
Andrea Rosen
Stuart Shave
Iwan Wirth
THE ART
CONSULTANT
Diego Cortez
Mark Fletcher
Sanford Heller
Philippe Segalot
Thea Westreich
THE COLLECTOR
Peter Brant
Eli Broad
Francesca von
Habsburg
Dakis Joannou
Baroness Marion
Lambert
Jean-Pierre Lehmann
Eugenio López
Bernardo Paz
François Pinault
The Judith Rothschild
Foundation (Harvey
S. Shipley Miller)
Charles Saatchi
THE AUCTION
HOUSE EXPERT
Amy Cappellazzo
Simon de Pury
Tobias Meyer
THE MUSEUM
PROFESSIONAL:
DIRECTORS AND
CURATORS
Lisa Dennison
Tom Eccles
Alanna Heiss
Glenn Lowry
Julia Peyton-Jones
THE ART FAIR
DIRECTOR
Samuel Keller
“Art is about life,
the art market is about
money.” —DAMIEN HIRST
l0M#0f8f¶ 8fl 8ß0 l00 808#0 0l l0l߶8 l0 00M0.¨—THE ART NEWSPAPER, London, on Art Now! Vol. 2
| 8 | "l90f¶l0l߶ 8000l 1ß$08l8 800M8 8 lllll0 l8f¶0f l08ß lll0. 1ß$08l8 l8 #f80ll08ll¶
Amy Cappellazzo is currently the International Co-Head of
Post-War and Contemporary Art for Christie’s, where she has
worked since 2001. Before holding this post, she was an art
adviser in Miami. She also worked as a curator for the
renowned Rubell collection, and has curated several museum
shows and exhibitions.
Separating Contemporary and Post-War art
When I got to Christie’s there was a distinctly separate
Contemporary department from what was called Post-
War. The idea, at the time, in creating two distinct depart-
ments was that there was a whole area of cutting-edge,
young Contemporary Art that needed to be singled out
and developed on its own. There was a really defining
moment when Christie’s sold the Jeff Koons Woman in
Tub (1988) for the second time, in May 2001, for over
$ 2.5 million. It had sold for $ 1.7 million the year
before. In a very short period of time, there had been this
big run up in the Koons market, and it felt like there was
no separate treatment of cutting-edge art. And when
Koons made that enormous price it felt like there was
this coming together of those two areas and departments.
Actually, the real decision was made after 9/11.
On selling works made in the last ten years
at auction
It is often said that Contemporary is the only area of the
auction house that has a growing inventory. Every season,
there’s a new artist who has a deep enough market to
come to auction and sell well and, maybe eventually,
become a night-sale artist and sell at a higher price point.
For example, all the hot Contemporary artists: Takashi
Murakami, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons etc., when they
make new work every year, the market absorbs them. I
might not see them at auction right away, but I will see
them at some point. The nostalgia loop of holding some-
thing gets shorter and shorter. So it’s not uncommon for
me to see something a year or two after it was made.
In taking charge of that new area of the market, you have
to really do an extraordinary amount of homework to
understand: How deep is the market? Where are things
buried? How well are the other works placed? Are they
likely to come up to auction, given the demand on the
primary market? Who were all those people standing in
line who never got a painting by that artist? Would they
be buying at auction, and if so, at what price point? Are
they true auction buyers or are they the kind of collectors
who only buy on primary market because they get things
inexpensively offered to them? You have to really study
the market forces.
I probably dedicate more time than I should to watching
the younger markets; I’m always interested in the
younger artists because they’re the future of the market.
You need them to keep growing and emerging, and you
have to watch them very closely, and therefore it can be
very time consuming. I am conscious of the fact that you
can burn a whole career on a failed sale. For example, if
you put a young artist on a very big stage and they can’t
keep the stage, you run the risk of tanking the market
and burning a career. I’m not sitting here in this ethical
position claiming that I have to take care of young artists;
it’s more a question of burning my own inventory out,
too, by running it up too high.
The auction’s effect on an artist’s career
Jeff Koons was completely born and raised at auction,
although his gallery, Sonnabend, does a good job in the
primary market of selling his work, but the strength of
his market owes everything to auction, truthfully. There
are also other examples, like Richard Prince, Cindy
Sherman, Takashi Murakami, etc.
On Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Profit selling
for $ 5.5 million
Sure. That’s another one. That set the bar for a great
Basquiat. What was essentially missing in the Basquiat
market was that one price that happened at Christie’s—it
felt a little unusual for the market because there were still
so many run-of-the-mill Basquiats trading for $ 400 000
or $ 500 000. That was really an extraordinary reach at
the time. In Richard Prince’s own words, I think he at
one time said that he owes more to auction houses than
he does to museums for the success of his career. That’s
another great example.
An Andreas Gursky photograph versus a Prince
photograph
With the Gursky photos that tend to make the top prices,
out of the edition of six, maybe four are in museum col-
lections. Richard’s market is a little bit different. There
are certain museums that own a lot of his work, like the
Whitney, for example, but Richard was not as heavily and
broadly collected by museums right from the get-go.
With Gursky, a huge price for a certain image is possible
because it is the only example not in a museum, whereas
the other five examples are in museum collections.
Buying at auction
People like depth in markets. Basically, auctions bring
transparency and democracy to this market. It’s an un-
regulated market, so there are still lots of other things
that remain undisclosed. In auction, you might not know
who is bidding or whether it is a dealer or a private col-
lector, but you can count the number of telephone bid-
ders on it, you can count the number of paddles, and you
can assess the depth of the market.
On whether the market is manipulated by
someone with inventory or a vested interest
I have a few stocks that I follow very closely, personally.
I’m positive there are people with much more informa-
tion than I have, so how do I manage to be successful in
what I do in the stock market, despite the fact that I’m
not getting the best inside information? I pose that same
question in other markets that are supposedly regulated
and transparent. Some markets, such as art, are thinly
traded; a fabulous object in the many millions of dollars
may never find twenty bidders. In the end, like a stock,
you have to believe in the inherent quality of something.
We sold the Jackson Pollock from the Museum of
Modern Art for a stunning price—$ 11 million and
change. That was a fabulously strong price. There were
actually a number of bidders for a while, but in the end,
it was essentially two people, and that’s what one can
expect. It’s usually down to two, even at a lower price
point, but certainly, the higher you get, the thinner it gets.
Collectors who do “well” at auction
They are the ones who are focused and disciplined; the
ones who are really searching for quality; the ones who
can see and feel and smell an artist’s importance before
the rest of the world does. Someone with a good eye;
somebody who is very impulsive and will bid to the
end—that’s the kind of person who is successful. They
buy a lot because they don’t always buy with value in
mind, but they’re certainly good buyers.
On the value of a life-sized taxidermy horse
hanging from the ceiling [Maurizio Cattelan’s
The Ballad of Trotsky (1996)]
It is a very difficult piece. That happened to be an out-
standing price ($ 2 million) and an excellent example of
the artist’s work. But the thing to consider also is that it’s
a two-bidder situation, there were really two people fight-
ing for it [reportedly Dakis Joannou and Bernard
Arnault]. And that’s what auction is all about. It’s getting
those people in the ring to fight, to spar with one an-
other and really see who the winner is. […]
There are always advantages and disadvantages to auc-
tions. There is a risk that one takes when they put some-
thing up at auction—you hope that it was estimated
properly, you hope that the specialist you were working
with gave you the right information about the market,
and that you were consulted in advance and lowered the
reserve, if needed. There are a lot of factors involved, but
offering something privately can be just as risky.
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
f00 08ß 00fß 8 N00l0 08f00f
0ß 8 l8ll00 88l0
Amy Cappellazzo, International Co-Head of Post-War and
Contemporary Art, Christie’s, New York
Left: Richard Prince, Untitled (Cowboy), 1999, ektacolour
photograph, image: 154.94 x 82.55 cm (61 x 32
1
⁄2 in. ),
edition of 3 + 1 AP. Courtesy of Gladstone Gallery, New York
© Richard Prince 1999
“…Contemporary is the
only area of the auction house
that has a growing inventory.”
8¶ß0߶M008 Nll0 0l0¶8ßll¶ 008l¶ß00 8ß0 0l090fl¶ #ll0000 8fl 000k8.¨—OCEAN DRIVE, Miami
Born in Cyprus, Dakis Joannou is a civil engineer and
architect by training. He is the chairman of a group of pri-
vately held building and civil engineering companies.
Joannou is renowned as a voracious yet discerning collector
of Contemporary Art. He sits on the boards of the Guggen-
heim and the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and is
also an international council member of MoMA and the
Tate. He is often closely associated with Jeff Koons, whose
work he has been diligently collecting and supporting since
the famous “Equilibrium” series (1985), and more recently
with the British artist duo, Tim Noble and Sue Webster.
Building and maintaining a collection
I started collecting about twenty years ago, when I saw
Jeff Koons’ One Ball Total Equilibrium Tank (1985) at his
first show at International with Monument. I have
always loved Jeff’s work; he’s always coming up with
stronger ideas and pieces.
I started the Deste Foundation in 1983 to organize exhib-
itions, events and publications which engage in a dia-
logue with Contemporary Art and the cultural commu-
nity in Athens and abroad. The foundation offers me a
special opportunity to share my collection with the
public and to open up a dialogue that might not be
possible with a private collection in one’s home. It is
important for me to maintain that openness and com-
munication rather than keeping the works in my home
only for myself, my family and friends to see.
I often concentrate on an artist’s work over a long period
of time, building on my relationship with the artist and
developing an in-depth engagement with his or her
body of work, which also connects to my collection as
a whole. I’m very engaged personally with the works in
my collection and I know immediately, when I see a
piece, if it’s something I want to live with and bring into
my home. The important thing is to have respect for the
art and for the artist, that’s paramount. Once that is
there, whatever you do depends on your priorities, your
interests, your personality.
On art advisers
I think a collector has to have his own opinions, his own
strategy, his own personality, his own character and his
own vision. It’s important to get opinions from art ad-
visers, from galleries, from other artists, from curators;
information never hurt anybody. But the bottom line is:
you have to make your own decisions. I would not
advise any collector to buy whatever one adviser tells
him. Then he won’t have his own collection; it will be
something else. I have known and worked with Jeffrey
Deitch for the past 23 years. I have a special relationship
with Jeffrey that goes beyond the formal art adviser/
collector relationship. We have organized several exhib-
itions together and he is one of the curators of the 2004
exhibition of works from my collection.
On large-scale or difficult-to-house works
I’m in a special situation, having the collection and the
Foundation, so the scale of works isn’t something I con-
sider so much. I give a lot of importance to living with
the art, but at the same time, I don’t exclude a piece that
doesn’t fit into the house. I always have the opportunity
to enjoy the work in a museum, in a group show some-
where, or in an exhibition at the Deste Foundation.
Buying and selling
As you grow, so does your collection, and occasionally
you re-assess and edit the collection to become more
focused.
I mostly buy works on the primary market, it’s the nature
of my collection. I am always interested in a great Koons,
a great Maurizio Cattelan, a great Noble and Webster,
and a great Chris Ofili, and if the opportunity appears,
I will buy on the secondary market or at auction.
Recent developments in the Contemporary Art
market
I think what has happened in the past few years in the
Contemporary Art world is fantastic. More and more
people are getting involved. There is a better understand-
ing and a better acceptance of Contemporary Art. People
are not cracking jokes any more. The works are taken
seriously. There is more engagement with culture and
with art. This engagement enriches one’s life, it enriches
one’s psyche. There are now a great number of collect-
ors, and the general public is more interested in art.
Mainstream magazines are covering Contemporary Art
in a serious way, and there is a broader awareness. It’s
important that the art world escapes from the insular
bubble and relates to a larger public.
The opinions that matter most in the art world
The artist’s, the artist’s opinion foremost.
When Jeff Koons created the statuary series with
Louis XIV (1986), the Italian Woman (1985) and the
Rabbit (1986), Louis XIV was the highest priced
piece. Today, history views the Rabbit as Koons’
most valuable and iconic work. Can the artist be
wrong?
Really, I didn’t know that! I am glad to hear it. I felt the
same way. I have Louis but not the Rabbit. So was it a
mistake? Maybe it was. Maybe it was not. We don’t know.
In the end, I think history will go on the side of the
artist. Time, history, that’s much more important than
the media. I really think that what remains is what the
artist has put into the work.
For me, it’s important to meet the artists, especially if you
consider acquiring a work from one of their first shows. It’s
essential to talk to them to understand what they’re doing,
to know them, to understand how they think, understand
their vision and feel the energy. That helps me to relate
and engage with the work on a more personal level.
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
ß 00ll00l0f 088 l0 0890
0l8 0Nß 0#lßl0ß8
Dakis Joannou, voracious yet discerning collector of Contemporary Art
and founder of the Deste Foundation in Athens
Top: Chris Ofili, The Adoration of Captain Shit and
the Legend of the Black Stars, 1998, mixed media on
canvas, 244 x 183 x 13 cm (96
1
⁄8 x 72 x 5
1
⁄8 in.). Courtesy
of Afroco, The Dakis Joannou Collection, Athens, and
Victoria Miro Gallery Bottom: Jeff Koons, Michael Jackson
and Bubbles, 1988, porcelain, 106.68 x 179.07 x 82.55 cm
(42 x 70
1
⁄2 x 32
1
⁄2 in.) © Jeff Koons
“The important thing is to
have respect for the art and for
the artist, that’s paramount.”
| 10 | "ß l0l8l 0l 0ß0 00ß0f00 #8lßll߶8, 800l#l0f08 8ß0 0f8Nl߶8 lf0M lN0 0l
Charles Saatchi has been collecting art for the last thirty years
and showing it, for the last twenty, in his own gallery in
London. In its early days, the Saatchi Gallery mounted land-
mark exhibitions of American artists, including Donald Judd,
Brice Marden, Sol LeWitt, Dan Flavin, Bruce Nauman,
Richard Serra, Jeff Koons and Robert Gober, giving British
audiences unprecedented exposure to this work. Following the
stock market crash of 1989, Saatchi sold most of his blue-chip
works to become Contemporary British art’s most enthusiastic
champion, in the process launching the careers of some of
today’s best known artists, collectively known as the YBAs
(Young British Artists); they include Damien Hirst, Sarah
Lucas, the Chapman brothers, Rachel Whiteread, Chris Ofili,
Tracey Emin and Glenn Brown. He exhibited and promoted
the YBAs in several shows, including the Royal Academy’s
historic “Sensation” blockbuster, which travelled to the
Brooklyn Museum in 1999.
Always the subject of controversy, he is renowned for buying
an artist’s work in quantity and then selling the work years
later at a large profit. He has been the largest and most
successful art collector/speculator in the market for the past
twenty years.
In London, his reputation for not granting interviews and not
attending his own openings, such as the blockbuster “The
Triumph of Painting” (2005), has served to insure that the art
world is constantly speculating on his next move.
On being a “super collector”
Who cares what I’m described as? Art collectors are pretty
insignificant in the scheme of things. What matters and
survives is the art.
I buy art that I like. I buy it to show it off in exhibitions.
Then, if I feel like it, I sell it and buy more art. As I have
been doing this for thirty years, I think most people in
the art world get the idea by now. It doesn’t mean I’ve
changed my mind about the art that I end up selling, it
just means that I don’t want to hoard everything
forever.
Charles Saatchi as art patron
I don’t buy art to ingratiate myself with artists, or as an
entrée to a social circle. Of course, some artists get upset
if you sell their work. But it doesn’t help them whimper-
ing about it, and telling anyone who will listen. Sandro
Chia, for example, is most famous for being dumped. At
last count I read that I had flooded the market with 23
of his paintings. In fact, I only ever owned seven paint-
ings by Chia. One morning I offered three of them
back to Angela Westwater, his New York dealer where
I had originally bought them, and four back to Bruno
Bischofberger, his European dealer where, again, I had
bought those. Chia’s work was tremendously desirable at
the time and all seven went to big-shot collectors or
museums by close of day. If Sandro Chia hadn’t had a
psychological need to be rejected in public, this issue
would never have been considered of much interest. If an
artist is producing good work, someone selling a group
of strong ones does an artist no harm at all, and in fact
can stimulate their market.
The rules and advice to consider
There are no rules I know of. Nobody can give you advice
after you’ve been collecting for a while. If you don’t
enjoy making your own decisions, you’re never going to
be much of a collector anyway. But that hasn’t stopped
the growing army of art advisers building “portfolio”
collections for their clients.
On the right price to pay
I never think too much about the market. I don’t mind
paying three or four times the market value of a work
that I really want. Just ask the auction houses.
As far as taste is concerned, as I stated earlier, I primarily
buy art in order to show it off. So it’s important for me
that the public respond to it and Contemporary Art in
general.
What and when to sell
There is no logic or pattern I can rely on. I don’t have a
romantic attachment to what could have been. If I had
kept all the work I had ever bought, it would feel like
Kane sitting in Xanadu surrounded by his loot. It’s
enough to know that I have owned and shown so many
masterpieces of modern times.
Buying art that is not “commercial”
Lots of ambitious work by young artists ends up in a
dumpster after its warehouse debut. So an unknown
artist’s big glass vitrine holding a rotting cow’s head
covered by maggots and swarms of buzzing flies may be
pretty unsellable—until the artist becomes a star. Then
he can sell anything he touches.
But mostly, the answer is that installation art like Richard
Wilson’s oil room [purchased by Saatchi in 1990] is only
buyable if you’ve got somewhere to exhibit it. I was
always in awe of Dia for making so many earthworks and
site-specific installations possible. That is the exception:
a collector whose significance survives.
In short, sometimes you have to buy art that will have no
value to anyone but you, because you like it and believe
in it. The collector I have always admired most, Count
Panza di Biumo, was commissioning large installations
by Carl Andre, Donald Judd and Dan Flavin at a time
when nobody but a few other oddballs were interested.
On painting
It’s true that Contemporary painting responds to the
work of video makers and photographers. But it’s also
true that Contemporary painting is influenced by music,
writing, MTV, Picasso, Hollywood, newspapers, Old
Masters. But, unlike many of the art world heavy-hitters
and deep thinkers, I don’t believe painting is middle-class
and bourgeois, incapable of saying anything meaningful
anymore, too impotent to hold much sway. For me, and
for people with good eyes who actually enjoy looking
at art, nothing is as uplifting as standing before a
great painting, whether it was painted in 1505 or last
Tuesday.
Art as investment
There are no rules about investment. Sharks can be good.
Artist’s dung can be good. Oil on canvas can be good.
There’s a squad of conservators out there to look after
anything an artist decides is art.
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
N08l M8ll0f8 8ß0 80f9l908
l8 l00 8fl
Charles Saatchi—“super collector” and gallery owner, exhibitor
and most enthusiastic champion of the YBAs (Young British Artists)
“If you don’t enjoy
making your own decisions,
you’re never going to be
much of a collector anyway.”
l00 llß08l 00ll00ll0ß8 0l l00 8fll8l`8 N0fk lß l00 N0fl0.¨ —CASA VIVA, Madrid, on Kippenberger
Museums versus galleries
I like everything that helps Contemporary Art reach a
wider audience. However, sometimes a show is so dismal
it puts people off. Many curators, and even the odd
Turner Prize jury, produce shows that lack much visual
appeal, wearing their oh-so-deep impenetrability like a
badge of honour. They undermine all efforts to encour-
age more people to respond to new art. So although I
didn’t adore “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida” [a 2004 show at the
Tate Modern featuring Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas and
Angus Fairhurst], it was nice to see something in the Tate
that was fresh from the artists’ studio. It helped make the
Tate more relevant to today’s artists. Of course the work
had to come direct from the artists’ dealers—it was brand
new. Anyway, what’s wrong with Jay Jopling getting just a
little richer?
Art collecting for posterity
I don’t buy art in order to leave a mark or to be remem-
bered; clutching at immortality is of zero interest to any-
one sane.
The greatest artists of the 20th century
General art books dated 2105 will be as brutal about
editing the late 20th century as they are about almost all
other centuries. Every artist other than Jackson Pollock,
Andy Warhol, Donald Judd and Damien Hirst will be a
footnote.
On dealers
An occupational hazard of some of my art-collector
friends’ infatuation with art is their encounter with a cer-
tain type of art dealer. Pompous, power-hungry and
patronizing, these doyens of good taste would seem to be
better suited to manning the door of a nightclub, approv-
ing who will be allowed through the velvet ropes. Their
behaviour alienates many fledgling collectors from any
real involvement with the artist’s vision.
These dealers like to feel that they “control” the market.
But of course, by definition, once an artist has a vibrant
market, it can’t be controlled. For example, one promin-
ent New York dealer recently said that he disapproved of
the strong auction market, because it allowed collectors
to jump the queue of his “waiting list”. So instead of cele-
brating an artist’s economic success, they feel castrated
by any loss to their power base. And then there are
visionary dealers, without whom many great artists of
our century would have slipped by unheralded.
Critics
The art critics on some of Britain’s newspapers could
as easily have been assigned gardening or travel, and
been cheerfully employed for life. This is because many
newspaper editors don’t themselves have much time
to study their “Review” section, or have much interest
in art.
So we now enjoy the spectacle of critics swooning with
delight about an artist’s work when its respectability has
been confirmed by consensus and a top-drawer show—
the same artist’s work that ten years earlier they ignored
or ridiculed. They must live in dread of some mean sod
bringing out their old cuttings. However, when a critic
knows what she or he is looking at and writes revealingly
about it, it’s sublime.
On collectors
However suspect their motivation, however social-climb-
ing their agenda, however vacuous their interest in decor-
ating their walls, I am beguiled by the fact that rich folk
everywhere now choose to collect Contemporary Art
rather than racehorses, vintage cars, jewelry or yachts.
Without them, the art world would be run by the State,
in a utopian world of apparatchik-approved, Culture-
Ministry-sanctioned art. So if I had to choose between
Mr. and Mrs. Goldfarb’s choice of art or some bureaucrat
who would otherwise be producing VAT forms, I’d take
the Goldfarbs. Anyway, some collectors I’ve met are just
plain delightful, abounding with enough energy and
enthusiasm to brighten your day.
Artists
If you study a great work of art, you’ll probably find the
artist was a kind of genius. And geniuses are different to
you and me. So let’s have no talk of temperamental, self-
absorbed and petulant babies. Being a good artist is the
toughest job you could pick, and you have to be a little
nuts to take it on. I love them all.
Note: This interview was first published in The Art
Newspaper.
“I don’t buy art in order to leave a mark
or to be remembered; clutching at immortality
is of zero interest to anyone sane.”
Opposite: Ron Mueck, Mask II, 2001, mixed media,
77.15 x 118.11 x 85.09 cm (30
3
⁄8 x 46
1
⁄2 x 33
1
⁄2 in.).
Art Supporting Foundation/SFMOMA. Image courtesy of
James Cohan Gallery, New York Below: Glenn Brown,
The Hinterland, 2006, oil on wood, 148 x 122.5 cm
(58
1
⁄4 x 48
1
⁄4 in.)
| 1Z | "1ß$08l8 l8 ß0l (08l 8 #00ll800f, 00l 8 00M#8߶ N0l00 0f08808 00f lll08l¶l0 0# Nll0 8fl,
Working from Berlin, Max Hetzler has been presenting a
consistently high level programme for over thirty years.
Several of the German artists he represented in the 1980s
became luminaries over a decade later. He has shown the
great Martin Kippenberger, Thomas Struth, Albert Oehlen,
Günther Förg for decades, as well as bringing American
stars like Christopher Wool and Jeff Koons to European
audiences.
Why Berlin?
The political structure in Germany is very different from
France or England. After the reunification and after the
crash in the art market in the early nineties, I knew this
was an opportunity for me to move ahead again and par-
ticipate in a new situation, because the desire for an intel-
lectual, cultural and political centre was obvious. It could
only happen in Berlin—and after a couple of difficult
years, the city improved a lot, and it replaced Cologne as
the centre of the German art world. Thanks to all the
artists who settled in Berlin and worked with galleries
that opened here, it became one of the European centres
for art. So I am very happy to be here. For artists, it only
makes sense to show in a capital of discourse, a capital
with an intellectual climate and a centre for the arts.
The difference between a German art dealer and
one who is American, French or Japanese
In Europe the market certainly is dominated by London
with its auction houses, international galleries, and a
strong relationship to American collectors. Germany is
different, here you find local art communities, and not
just one concentration, like Paris or London. This helps
to create collectors and exhibitions in different cities, and
it also generates internationally connected museums. It’s
a rich market in the sense that there are many collectors
in different areas who like art and support the artists. For
us, this means more travelling and work to get the art to
the clients and to the museums. But it’s a country with a
tradition of collecting and even a longer tradition of
museums. Being in Berlin, you profit from these
resources all over the country. It’s a good place to be.
Are your collectors truly Europeans or are they
Americans?
Both. If an artist like Christopher Wool shows in a
European gallery, he expects the dealer to place the work
in European collections. It wouldn’t make sense for the
artist or for the gallery to sell back to the United States,
or to just take the work to art fairs so everyone can come
and buy and appreciate. If we show an American artist, of
course, we try to place the work in Europe, and we try to
place it with collections that we have a close relationship
to. In that respect, my main concern is to work with
European collectors.
The difference between European collectors and
American collectors
I don’t see such a big difference. I mean, it’s a cliché to
say that European collectors are not selling or are more
committed, or even to say they are more educated. I
know great collectors in the United States and I always
admire how educated they are, how knowledgeable. I am
always fascinated with collectors in America, how curious
they are about art, how they want to learn about new
artists and how dedicated they are. There is no big differ-
ence at all. It’s an international world, with all the infor-
mation you need to follow up.
Who is Martin Kippenberger?
One of the most inspiring persons I have met in my life.
The first time I ran into Martin was in 1979 in Berlin. I
was putting a show together, “Europe 79—art of the 80s”,
at that time in Stuttgart and I wanted to invite him. He
didn’t have any work available, but he promised to come
back with a group of works and asked me to do a gallery
show. This happened two years later in 1981. It was the
first show we did together, and from then on until I
moved to Berlin in 1993, we did a show almost every sec-
ond year. He was always special and different from the
artists I knew at that time. He was not only interested in
the art world, he was interested in life, and he combined
his art with a personal view of how you can live as a cre-
ative person. Martin was a gesamtkunstwerk, all he did
was related and inspired by art. He wouldn’t separate the
work and the studio from how he performed in public—
it was a unity. He was a very honest person, always look-
ing for a laugh, and a man who gave a lot of inspiration
to everybody around him. It’s hard to talk about some-
one you admire as much and spent a lot of time with.
The year he died, his age, and the number
of paintings he left
He died in 1997, 44 years of age, of cirrhosis of the liver.
As far as the number of works is concerned …I don’t
know. He was constantly working, he was publishing a
lot, he was printing, at one point he had his own maga-
zine, his own record company—everything he did was
aimed at creating beautiful stuff in every respect. There
are a lot of works of Kippenberger around. Whatever he
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
ßl l00 0ß0 0l l00 908, #8lßll߶
0008M0 lßl0fß8ll0ß8ll¶ lM#0fl8ßl 8¶8lß
Max Hetzler, art dealer working from Berlin, early supporter
of young German artists, including Martin Kippenberger
Left: Albert Oehlen, Halbnackt, 2004, oil and paper on
canvas, 180 x 170 cm (70
7
⁄8 x 67 in.) Opposite: Martin
Kippenberger, Ohne Titel, 1992, oil on wood, 180 x 150 cm
(70
7
⁄8 x 59 in.)
“For an artist today, I think
the most challenging thing
is to be a painter and
to develop a new language
of painting.”
008l¶ß, #0# 00ll0f0 0f lllM, Nll0 8 80ß80 0l 00M0f 8ß0 80K¶ Nll.¨—WOOFIN’, Tokyo
touched, he changed into something unusual. He
designed books, posters, he did wonderful drawings,
paintings, sculptures, whatever—Kippenberger is a phe-
nomenon, because he didn’t go to the studio every day
like Gerhard Richter does, for example, to only create
paintings. He was always thinking about what he could
do next, and he absorbed the world around him; he was
inspired by people, but he gave it back, a generous man.
I think the great thing about him is that he could absorb
everything, but he could give as well. He was not this
intellectual, creative person focusing just on one thing,
going to the studio, doing paintings or sculpture or pho-
tography. He represented a different type of artist. I
mean, Gerhard Richter is a painter, period; he changed
painting, he let us see painting in a different way, he
changed art and our understanding of art and the history
of painting. Whereas Kippenberger is a new type of
artist—he changed our lives, in a way, his approach was
completely different, and that’s what makes him special.
Who can be compared to Kippenberger?
Maybe Joseph Beuys, because Beuys also had this vision
of the human being, how to influence and change it
through art. Kippenberger was a missionary. He wanted
to change you and not just your view of art, somewhat
like Beuys.
Prices have gone from 50000 to 1000000 in five
years, a multiple of 20. What happened?
At the end of the 90s, painting became internationally
important again through a new generation of painters.
People realized that it didn’t just come out of the blue,
that there was a father generation, with Kippenberger
and Albert Oehlen. In another field, we now have the
same experience with Richard Prince: people go back in
history and ask, “Where does it come from? Who influ-
enced this new generation?” Today’s artists are important
for creating this new market. Then one looks back and
wants to know where the art came from and who were
the important figures behind it. This is what happened
to the Kippenberger market in an extraordinary way. Of
course, his work is limited because, unfortunately, he died
so young. He can’t produce, he can’t continue to create
work and supply the market, and when there is a limited
amount of work, it’s normal that the market reacts and
prices go up. I think there’s no end to it.
A one million dollar Kippenberger
I see him in the same league as Jeff Koons. Kippenberger
is one of the major figures of the 80s and 90s; he influ-
enced a whole generation of new artists, and the art
world recognizes him just as it recognizes Koons or
Prince or Robert Gober or Jean-Michel Basquiat. His
career, market-wise, is maybe comparable to Basquiat.
Regarding Albert Oehlen
They are the same generation, they started around the
same time in the late 70s in Berlin. Kippenberger was
also a kind of impresario, who curated shows and invited
Oehlen, among others, to participate in a show that he
organized in his loft in Berlin. From the very beginning
there was a relationship with Oehlen. I started to show
both artists, first in group shows, and then gave them
solo shows from 1981 on, and after that, both were repre-
sented by the gallery. At some point, they shared a studio
in Spain, they travelled and spent time together in Los
Angeles and in Rio de Janeiro, and they collaborated on
works. So at certain times in their careers, they were very
connected and inspired each other, but at other times,
they couldn’t be far enough apart. Both were very
demanding artists and needed room to work for them-
selves.
What is Albert Oehlen’s artistic statement?
He is a painter. Painting is what he is interested in: how
far you can go as a painter, what can you add to painting,
what does it mean to be a painter within the tradition of
painting? For an artist today, I think the most challenging
thing is to be a painter and to develop a new language of
painting. After all, look at the great painters of the 50s
and 60s, like de Kooning. What can you do today, if you
don’t want to be just a figurative, boring painter, if you
don’t want to just fulfil what people expect you to do?
I think Oehlen is a researcher, he tells us what painting
means today, that you can go a step further, that you can
add something to the history of painting. So, for me, he
is the most exciting and challenging German painter of
our time.
Advice for a new collector
A collector should buy, and should not hesitate to buy.
What I think is most important is to build up a relation-
ship with a dealer whom you trust, and to learn through
buying.
“A collector should buy
and should not hesitate to buy—
and learn through buying.”
| 14 | "1ß$08l8 088 8 l0߶·08l80ll8000 f0#0l8ll0ß l0f #f0000l߶ 0080lll0l, ¶l088¶
LEROY GRANNIS, SURF PHOTOGRAPHY
08#l0fl߶
l00 #0fl00l N890
Tapping into the archives of America’s most important
surf photographer of the ‘60s and ‘70s
LEROY GRANNIS.
SURF PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE 1960s AND 1970s
Collector’s edition limited to 1,000 copies, numbered
and signed by LeRoy Grannis
Ed. Jim Heimann / Steve Barilotti / Hardcover in a slipcase,
XXL-format: 39.6 x 33 cm (15.6 x 13 in.), 278 pp.
6 Jâ0 l $400 l £ Zâ0 l f â0.000
LeRoy Grannis, Carlsbad,
California, 2001
At a time when surfing is more popular than ever, it’s fit-
ting to look back at the years that brought the sport into
the mainstream. Developed by Hawaiian islanders over
five centuries ago, surfing began to peak on the mainland
in the 1950s, taking America—and the world—by storm.
Surfing became not just a sport, but a way of life, and the
culture that surrounded it was admired and exported
across the globe. One of the key image-makers from that
period is LeRoy Grannis, a surfer since 1931, who began
photographing the scene in California and Hawaii in the
longboard Gidget era of the early 1960s.
This collection, drawn from Grannis’s personal archives,
showcases an impressive selection of surf photographs—
from the bliss of catching the perfect wave at San Onofre
to dramatic wipeouts at Oahu’s famed North Shore. An
innovator in the field, Grannis suction-cupped a water-
proof box to his board, enabling him to change film in
the water and stay closer to the action than other photog-
raphers of the time. Equally notable is his work covering
an emerging surf lifestyle, from “surfer stomps” and
hoards of fans at surf contests to board-laden woody sta-
tion wagons along the Pacific Coast Highway. It is in
these iconic images that a sport still in its adolescence
embodied the free-spirited nature of an era—a time
before shortboards and celebrity endorsements, when
surfing was at its bronzed best.
The photographer: LeRoy Grannis’s initial foray into
surfing began at age 14 with a six-foot slab of pine, but it
wasn’t until the age of 42 that he picked up a camera and
made a career out of it. Under doctor’s orders to take up
a hobby, Grannis built a darkroom in his garage and
began shooting surfers at Hermosa Beach, selling prints
for a buck apiece. His photos soon started appearing in
many of the burgeoning surf magazines, and “Photo:
Grannis” quickly became a hallmark of the California
surf scene of the 1960s. Grannis is considered one of the
most important documentarians of the sport, and was
inducted into the Surfing Hall of Fame in 1966.
The editor: Jim Heimann is Executive Editor for
TASCHEN America in Los Angeles and the author of
numerous books on architecture, popular culture, and
Hollywood history.
The author: Over the past decade working as Surfer maga-
zine’s globe-roaming editor at large, photojournalist
Steve Barilotti has made it his business to document
the sport, art, and lore of surfing. His writing has also
appeared in The Perfect Day and the books of renowned
surf photographers Art Brewer and Ted Grambeau.
Between trips, Steve lives in San Diego, California.
XXL
Format
Opposite: Pipeline, Hawaii, 1977
S
O
L
D
O
U
T
l0M08 N0l00 0ll0ß 0ß0 0# 88 00ll00·l80l0 800fßM0ßl8.¨—THE GUARDIAN UNLIMITED, London
| 1ë | "l`M l0flll00 l0 0890 0l80090f00 1ß$08l8. ll l 080 8ß 0ßllMll00 000¶0l, M¶ 000k800l908
The revolution was shot in black and white, on a Sunday
afternoon, at 250th of a second. October 2, 1966. World
Surfing Championships, Ocean Beach, San Diego. Forty
thousand spectators jammed the beach and the newly
opened Ocean Beach pier. At the exact moment that
eighteen-year-old Robert “Nat” Young hoisted an awk-
ward California–shaped trophy over his head, there were
more than three hundred and forty thousand U.S. troops
in Vietnam, Brian Wilson was on the verge of releasing
his masterpiece, “Good Vibrations,” and LSD would
remain legal for three more months. Surfboards averaged
ten and a half feet in length and weighed thirty pounds.
Nat Young was now world champion. And the surfing
world had quietly tilted ninety degrees off its axis.
A tall, brash Australian, Young was flanked on the victory
dais by the soft-spoken Hawaiian Jock Sutherland and
California small-wave whiz kid Corky Carroll. A small
group of local and national media, among them
Newsweek and The New York Times, jostled to get close to
the winners. LeRoy Grannis, International Surfing maga-
zine’s sole staff photographer, roamed the fringes of the
crowd, methodically snapping off trophy shots with his
salt-corroded Pentax S camera. At a key instant in the
ceremony he focused and framed the jubilant Young
cheering, “I feel jazzed!”
The revolution was shot in black
and white, on a Sunday afternoon,
at 250th of a second
Despite the palpable buzz on the beach, Grannis
remained stoically detached. For him, the event was sim-
ply the culmination of a year of weekends shooting club
contests up and down the Southern California coast.
Grannis, then forty-nine, was in his sixth year of surf pho-
tography and thirty-fifth as a surfer. The next weekend he
would likely be back up at Malibu or Huntington Beach
for another small regional contest, and the World Surfing
Championships qualifying process would start anew.
Surf photography appeared a logical
choice, as Grannis lived a few blocks from
the ocean
LeRoy Grannis came to surf photography in late 1959,
not as a professional or an artist, but as a middle-aged
family man looking for a hobby to reduce the stress of
his job. Luckily, he happened to pick up his camera at a
pivotal point in surfing history. Born in Hermosa Beach,
California, in 1917, Grannis was a holdover from the red-
wood era of West Coast surfing, when a scant two hun-
dred California surfers rode massive eleven-foot boards
on the slow rollers off San Onofre and Palos Verdes Cove
with a dignified, gentlemanly esprit. They were the first
generation of mainland surfers to take up the ancient
sport, newly exported by Hawaiians George Freeth and
Duke Kahanamoku. They were also part of surfing’s ren-
aissance, which grew from a handful of Hawaiian beach
boys in Waikiki during the late nineteenth century.
Raised a block from the ocean in Hermosa Beach,
Grannis began surfing at age fourteen on a borrowed red-
wood plank that weighed close to a hundred pounds. It
was there, bobbing in the gentle swells beneath the
Hermosa Beach Pier, that he met fellow surfers Lewis
“Hoppy” Swarts, another Hermosa beach native, and
John “Doc” Ball, an affable University of Southern
California dental student who was ten years older than
Grannis. The three became lifelong friends.
In the years following the war, Grannis surfed sporadical-
ly, but became increasingly absorbed in the demands of
his job and raising four children. In late 1959 he was
diagnosed with a stress-related stomach ulcer, and his
doctor recommended a relaxing pastime. Surf photogra-
phy appeared a logical choice, as Grannis lived a few
blocks from the ocean and his teenage son Frank had
recently begun surfing. By June 1960 Grannis had built a
darkroom in his garage and developed a few rudimentary
photos, their style influenced by Doc Ball.
That summer, with an East German 35mm camera, he
began shooting 22nd Street in Hermosa Beach, a stretch
of undistinguished South Bay beach break that attracted
a crew of young surfers eager to show off for his lens. The
undisputed leader of the 22nd Street gang was Dewey
Weber, who at twenty-three had already starred in several
surf films and had just opened his own surfboard shop
in nearby Venice Beach. The small (five-foot-three) but
powerful Weber surfed aggressively and pushed the rest
of the crew, which included Henry Ford, Freddie Pfahler,
and Mike Zuetell, to perform their best. By the end of
1960 Grannis had shot and developed more than twenty-
five hundred frames.
Grannis’s darkroom was the closest thing to a one-hour
photo lab in the South Bay, and at a time when surf mag-
azines came out bimonthly, surfers were ravenous for cur-
rent shots of themselves. “Sometimes I’d go right from
shooting at 22nd Street to the darkroom, and before I
knew it there’d be half a dozen guys waiting to see what
I’d shot,” Grannis recalls. “And then I’d get them in the
darkroom and the body heat would become terrible.
There were a couple of kids, Tom and Don Craig, who
lived nearby who would go through my trash to see if I
threw anything away that they wanted.” From his house it
was only a forty-minute drive up the then two-lane
Pacific Coast Highway to Malibu, an obscure point break
when Grannis surfed it in the thirties, which by 1960 was
world-famous. With its perfect, tapering waves and prox-
imity to Hollywood, “the ’Bu” had become a bona fide
scene that drew surfing’s elite each summer. Although
extremely crowded even then, the break featured surf
stars such as Lance Carson, Johnny Fain, Mike Hynson,
and the legendary Miki Dora dancing across the face of
the swells with a quick, theatrical style that came to be
known as “hotdogging.” Grannis’s photographic skills
LEROY GRANNIS. SURF PHOTOGRAPHY
$0fll߶`8 ¶0l00ß 8¶0
By Jim Heimann and Steve Barilotti
Above: Pipeline, c. 1965 Left: Ford Woody, Redondo Beach,
1963 Opposite: Top: Jacobs Surfboards Advertising Shoot,
Hermosa Beach, 1963 Bottom: San Onofre, California,
1963
N00l0 00 llll00 Nll0 090f¶l0l߶ lß ¶00f 08l8l0¶00I¨—Nancy, USA, on taschen.com
LEROY GRANNIS. SURF PHOTOGRAPHY
were improving, and he sold his early Malibu shots to the
short-lived Reef magazine, initiating his career in print.
In November 1961 Grannis made his first trip to Hawaii,
the epicenter of the surfing frontier at the time. After
photographing small waves in Waikiki and Makaha for
two weeks, he headed for the fabled North Shore of
Oahu. By then a large swell had filled in, and Grannis
was stunned by the sheer magnitude and power of
Hawaiian waves. Using a 650mm telephoto lens, he cap-
tured the likes of Rick Grigg, Peter Cole, and Phil
Edwards racing down the massive concave faces of the
infamous “West Bowl” at Sunset Beach.
Surf photography could be dangerous
for even the most experienced waterman
Grannis returned to California with renewed fervor. Over
the next few years, he tripled his output and began shoot-
ing more color, lifestyle, contest, and advertising photos.
Insular and budget-minded, early surf marketers looked to
their own for graphic design and photos. Grannis had no
experience as a commercial photographer, nonetheless he
acquitted himself with simple, clever concepts. His photo
of Hermosa Beach surfer Ricky Hatch deftly stepping to
the tip in shoes and a spiffy business suit for Jacobs
Surfboards is considered a surf-photography classic. In
1963 Grannis bought a Calypso water camera (invented
by Jacques Cousteau, and the precursor of the Nikonos),
and produced a touchstone shot of Henry Ford executing
a perfect bottom turn at 22nd Street.
Grannis found out early on, however, that surf photogra-
phy could be dangerous for even the most experienced
waterman. While shooting Hawaii’s Sunset Beach with
his Nikonos from the water one day, a massive “West Peak
Bowl” swung unexpectedly toward the channel, breaking
far outside and trapping Grannis directly in its path. He
looked up to see a twenty-foot wall of whitewater and
three thickset eleven-foot surfboards hurtling toward his
unprotected head. He dove beneath the maelstrom but
managed to keep his precious camera safe. Later, with
help from his old friend Doc Ball, Grannis designed and
built his first rubber-lined, suction-cupped waterproof
box, which allowed him to change film and shoot from
the water with longer lenses and sit in the relative safety
of Sunset Beach or the Waimea Bay channel for hours
without returning to shore.
On land, Grannis loved the clean, cool remove provided
by the Century 1000 telephoto lens. Viewed from a half-
mile away, artfully framed surfers appeared as heroic fig-
ures within a vast arena such as Sunset Beach. But it was
his dedication to the rest of the beach scene that fills a
large gap in surfing’s collective memory today. Grannis’s
photography, especially from 1960 to 1965, caught surf-
ing at a critical juncture between cult and culture.
Upon first glance, his photos may evoke nostalgia for a
simpler, more naive era, but closer inspection reveals that
he was documenting surfing’s rapid evolution into an
iconic lifestyle. His photos captured the real thing, provid-
ing a bridge between the world of Beach Boy lyrics and
the reality of the Southern California beach scene. Surf
language, surf music, surf art, surf media, surf fashion—all
the basic elements of what are now considered essential to
modern surf culture were either conceived or codified
within this brief window of time. Grannis was one of the
few surf photographers to swing his camera off the wave
action and record it all.
| 18 | "1ß$08l8 l8 00fl8lßl¶ k00#l߶ l00 N0fl0`8 #flßll߶ #f08808 008¶ Nll0 ¶0l 8ß0l00f 00l#·
Described by Christopher Columbus as “the loveliest
land ever beheld by human eyes,” Cuba’s sumptuous
landscapes are marked by sun-drenched tobacco and
sugar cane fields and its cities ripe with music, dancing,
and jubilation. Celebrating the relics of Cuba’s revolu-
tionary glory days, this book explores everything from
the kinds of interiors seen in Buena Vista Social Club to
top-notch luxury hotels and cultural heritage sites. Via
a diverse selection of Cuban homes, hotels, gathering
places, and more, Inside Cuba takes you on a colorful
tour of Cuba’s most archetypal interiors. Just mix up
a Mojito, pop in a Compay Segundo CD, and fire up
a cigar—you’ll be in the perfect mood to savor these
luscious Cuban gems.
The photographer: Gianni Basso is specialized in travel
photography, architecture, and interiors. In 1989, he
founded the photography agency Vega MG. His work has
been widely published in books and magazines. He lives
in Milan.
The author: Julio César Pérez Hernández, Loeb Fellow
at Harvard Graduate School of Design 2001–2002 and
adjunct professor at the School of Architecture in
Havana, has lectured widely in the US and Europe about
Cuban architecture. He is a member of the Union of
Writers and Artists of Cuba and the recipient of several
international and national awards. His writings have
been published in the New York Times, Arquitectura Cuba
and Arquitectura y Urbanismo.
The editor: Angelika Taschen studied art history and
German literature in Heidelberg, gaining her doctorate
in 1986. Working for TASCHEN since 1987, she has pub-
lished numerous titles on the themes of architecture,
photography, design, and contemporary art.
INSIDE CUBA
100 (0N0l 0l l00
08fl0008ß
Cuba’s coolest digs
Highlights include:
• traditional time-worn homes bearing the patina
of generations of habitation
• Modernist houses—including one by Richard
Neutra—and artists’ homes
• a sugar baron’s grandiose palacio
• Partagás cigar factory, one of Havana’s oldest and finest
• the baroque building Palacio de los Capitanes
Generales
• the spectacular and futuristic Mario Girona-designed
ice cream haven that is Havana’s most popular hangout
• the bars Ernest Hemingway frequented, the hotel
where he stayed between 1932 and 1939, and the estate
near Havana he purchased in 1940, where he wrote
The Old Man and the Sea
• Don Diego Velázquez’s Moorish-influenced home
where gold was once processed before being shipped
to Spain
Opposite: Real Fábrica de Tabacos,
Partagás, Havana
INSIDE CUBA
Photos: Gianni Basso/Vega MG / Text: Julio César Pérez
Hernández / Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover,
format: 24 x 31.6 cm (9.4 x 12.4 in.), 416 pp.
08lf 6 J9.99 l $ 49.99
£ Z9.99 l f ë.900
l߶ 0l #00l0f8l·8lf0l00l߶ #f0000l8 l0f l00 8fM008lf lf890ll0f.¨— WALLPAPER, London, on Inside Asia
Jair Mon Pérez—A Feast of Spanish Tiles
Reproductions of several works by the famous Spanish
painter Francisco de Goya and some passages from
Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes’ masterpiece “Don
Quixote” are found among the thousands of tiles that dec-
orate the walls of the Casa Mon. These colorful tiles from
Seville, depicting bullfighting scenes and heraldic motifs,
are repeated almost ad infinitum inside the house, which
was originally built in Havana’s Vedado district in 1928
for a Jewish jeweler, today it is owned by Jair Mon Pérez,
inherited from his father. From the street one can see
a riot of tiles on the planters in the front garden and on
the steps leading to the porch. They continue along the
façade where the main entrance and two windows are
surrounded by tiles, which form a wainscot recalling the
magnificent Alhambra palaces in Granada, the so-called
“palacios nazaries.” The entry vestibule leads to the spa-
cious dining room which is also decorated with grand
wainscoting around the windows. But the star of the
show is another hallway, where a marble staircase with
elaborate wrought-iron railings is lit by an arched
stained-glass window—a fantastic display of many
jewel-like colors!
| Z0 | "8fllll8ßll¶ 00ß00l900 8ß0 #00l0¶f8#000 ... l00 88l0l0 00ll0fl8l 0lf00·
INSIDE CUBA
ll9l߶ lß l00 F08fl
0l l00 ßßllll08
Clockwise from top left: Entrance Hall of Jair Mon Pérez
House in Havana / The sober tiled walls of the kitchen con-
trast with the colourful mosaic of Goya’s 1792 work
“Muchachos trepando a un árbol”, visible in the background /
Inside, the tile wainscots also include mosaics with chivalric
scenes and vignettes from works by Goya. Partial view of his
work “La Vendimia/El Otoño” rendered in 1786.
Heladería Coppelia—The Hottest Spot
in Town for Cuban Ice Cream
“Coppelia” is not only the name of a beautiful ballet, it is
also a brand of famous, internationally acclaimed Cuban
ice cream. It is the only rival in Cuba for the hedonistic
trio of cigars, rum and coffee, and its quality has been
compared to that of Italian “gelato.”“Heladería Coppelia”
is a landmark in the heart of La Rampa, in Vedado. Since
it was built in 1966, it has been the most popular spot in
town, a unique gathering place where youngsters hang
out, lovers date, and students and friends meet. It was the
backdrop for the first scene of the Oscar-nominated 1995
Cuban film “Fresa y chocolate.” Designed by Cuban archi-
tect Mario Girona, it was conceived as a huge, lightweight
concrete structure surrounded by gardens in the center of
a city block. The design consists of two structures con-
nected by a bridge: the secondary one is a service block,
and the main one is a circular structure covered by a sin-
gle slab and crowned with a truncated cone; this ring has
a tinted-glass clerestory and anchors the exposed concrete
girders that cover six drum-like dining halls subdivided
by wood and glass partitions on the upper floor. The
whole ambience is open and very Cuban.
ll0ß 0l ß߶0llk8 188000ß 00lll¶ ll08 ll 8ll l0¶0l00f.¨ —BLACK ISSUES BOOK REVIEW, New York, on Inside Africa
Above: The transparent, open atmosphere in the building
encourages communication and impersonal mingling, part
of the charm of a place that skillfully assimilates Cuban idio-
syncrasies. Below left: The spatial fluidity of the interior is
ensured by the enormous light on the roof which has no inter-
mediate supports. Below right: The exposed reinforced con-
crete structure and the solid terrazzo floors, with a design
based on freeform curves, encompass a spacious, open, well-
ventilated public area.
XXL
Format
| ZZ | "N8¶ßlll@00 #f0M0ß800 08ß8 l`0l8l0lf0 00 008l0M0 0l 00 l'080lll0M0ßl I...l 0ß0 80MM0
Imagine having an opulent compilation of history’s
most elegant and beautiful patterns and designs at your
fingertips—to use, peruse, admire, and be inspired by.
The World of Ornament brings together the two greatest
encyclopedic collections of ornaments from the 19th
century chromo-lithographic tradition: Auguste Racinet’s
L’Ornement polychrome Volumes I and II (1869/1885)
and M. Dupont-Auberville’s L’Ornement des tissus (1877).
Adapted from historical items dating back to antiquity,
such as jewelry, tiles, stained glass, illuminated manu-
scripts, textiles, and ceramics, these ornamental designs
encompass a wide range of cultural aesthetics, including
classic Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Etruscan motifs,
Asian and middle-Eastern patterns, as well as European
designs from medieval times through the 19th century.
Artists, historians, and art lovers will appreciate this lav-
ish idea book, and interior designers and patternmakers
will be delighted that all of the ornamental designs may
be used and reproduced without restriction!
The author: David Batterhamhas been an antiquarian
bookseller in London since 1965. He specializes in books
and journals on the graphic arts, ornament, fashion, and
caricature, particulaly from France and Spain.
THE WORLD OF ORNAMENT
100 M08l 0080lll0l #8ll0fß8
lß 8ll 0l 0l8l0f¶
A. RACINET & M. DUPONT-AUBERVILLE
THE WORLD OF ORNAMENT
Introduction: David Batterham / Hardcover + DVD,
XXL-format: 29 x 44 cm: (11.4 x 17.3 in.), 528 pages
08lf 6 1â0 l $ Z00 l £ 100
f Zâ.000
PLUS DVD
5000
ROYALTY-FREE
HIGH-RESOLUTION
IMAGES
Opposite: Japanese Art—Cartouches
#00ll@00 80K 000l00f8 00 8l00l0 #8880.¨—MARIE-CLAIRE, Paris, on Auguste Racinet. The Complete Costume History
| Z4 | "100f0 08ß 00 l0N 000k8 00l l00f0 M0f0 (8N·0f0##l߶l¶ ¶0f¶0008 l08ß l0l8 0Klf80f0lß8f¶
In The World of Ornament we bring together the work of
two of the great encyclopaedic collections of ornaments
from the 19th-century chromolithographic tradition,
Auguste Racinet’s L’Ornement polychrome (2 volumes,
1869/1885) and A. Dupont-Auberville’s L’Ornement des
tissus (1877).
Little is know about Racinet beyond the fact that he
trained at first to be a painter. Fortunately for us, how-
ever, at the Ecole de la Ville de Paris he seems to have
recognised at an early stage that he lacked the imagina-
tion to be an artist and instead devoted his remarkable
skill as a draughtsman to recording and reproducing the
decorative images of the past. In fact he was now follow-
ing in his father’s footsteps, his father being a printer. He
worked on a number of books during the period
1845–1865 and showed a particular understanding of
and fondness for the Renaissance period. Although an
encyclopaedist in the sense of attempting to bring all the
accumulated knowledge of the past to the service of the
present, he was more than simply a technician. As a
Renaissance man, he believed in the power of art to
enrich our lives. His work is re-offered to the public in
the same spirit.
The need or desire for ornament
and decoration in our lives appears
to be a universal one
Dupont-Auberville’s background was very different. He
was a rich man, a passionate and erudite collector of
antiquities, mainly porcelain and textiles. His textile col-
lection was exhibited at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in
1880, and part of his collection was offered for sale at the
Hôtel Drouot, the Parisian saleroom, in a two-day sale in
February 1885. Further sales followed his death in 1891.
Superficially, Dupont-Auberville’s approach was similar to
that of Racinet, but being concerned with textiles it was
also fundamentally different in some important ways.
The fact that the two works are presented in a similar for-
mat suggests that perhaps Dupont-Auberville was
inspired by the earlier work to complement it with one
dealing with textiles, based primarily on his own collec-
tion. Ever since Isaac gave Joseph his coat of many
colours, decorated textiles have played an important part
in our cultural and even our political lives, for so often
they are associated with status or used in connection with
symbols and ritual. In our own day, when textiles are
mass-produced and we take them for granted, it is easy to
forget or overlook how different things were in the past.
As a Renaissance man, Racinet believed
in the power of art to enrich our lives
Dupont-Auberville shows, in his introduction and with
the aid of specially commissioned drawings by Charles
Kreuzberger, how materials and skills have influenced
ornamental styles from the linens of ancient Egypt, silks
from China and Persia, and the sumptuousness of the
Renaissance to the elaborate richness of 17th and 18th-
century Europe. Although each period drew upon the
past, it is remarkable how fresh and distinct each one
seems, and looking ahead to the 20th century we can
trace this inventive force continuing with the austere
‘modern’ lines of the 1920s, the pastel shades of the
1930s, and the jazzy 1950s and 60s.
Dupont-Auberville took his examples not only from his
own collection but also from a great range of sources—
museums and private collections and in some cases repre-
sentations of fabrics in paintings and drawings, particu-
larly from China. This extensive provenance demon-
strates the thoroughness, energy, and scholarship to
which we are being given access here. The notes to each
plate (nearly all of which reproduce a number of ex-
amples) are particularly informative in relating one peri-
od to another, tracing for example the echoes of early
Chinese and Persian motifs in subsequent eras.
Yet for all their scholarship and meticulous attention to
detail, Racinet and Dupont-Auberville were undoubtedly
men of their time. And ultimately this is very much a
19th-century collection—a celebration of confidence,
technical achievement, and sheer enjoyment!
THE WORLD OF ORNAMENT
ß ¶0l0 Mlß0 0l
lß8#lf8ll0ß8l M0lll8
By David Batterham
Above left: Greek and Greco-Roman Art—Polychrome
motifs on friezes Above right: Persian Art—Ceramics
Below left: 19th Century. Fabrics and wallpapers: endless-
design field Below right: Renaissance (16th and 17th Cen-
turies)—Manuscript illumination Opposite: Chinese Art—
Painted and gilded ornamental motifs on lacquered wood
ßll88. 100 f0#flßl M0f0 l08ß 0008 (08ll00 l0 8l800'8 M88l0f#l000.¨—TNT MAGAZINE, London, on Atlas Maior of 1665
| Zë | "10080 8f0 l00 80fl8 0l 00l0l8 N00f0 ¶00 08¶ 8 Ff088l8ß Fflß00 8ß0 f0llf0 l0
THE HOTEL BOOK. GREAT ESCAPES NORTH AMERICA
ff0M l00 f00N000 l0f08l
l0 l00 60ll $lf08M N8l0f8.
Following up on our Great Escapes Asia, Europe, Africa,
and South America titles, this volume concentrates on
the most extraordinary and tempting Canadian and
American hotels. Ranging from funky and inexpensive to
luxuriously elegant and wildly pricy, these hotels, inns,
guesthouses, bungalows, ranches, lodges, resorts and even
—yes—wigwams and treehouses will surely seduce you.
The editor: Angelika Taschen studied art history and
German literature in Heidelberg, gaining her doctorate
in 1986. Working for TASCHEN since 1987, she has pub-
lished numerous titles on the themes of architecture,
photography, design, and contemporary art.
The author: Daisann McLane is the author of
TASCHEN’s Cheap Hotels (2003). She is a contributing
editor and columnist for the National Geographic Traveler
magazine. For the last six years, she has been writing the
Frugal Traveler column for the New York Times Sunday
travel section. Her articles on culture, food, and travel
also appear in the New York Times Magazine, and the
International Herald Tribune.
The photographer: Don Freeman is a New York-based
photographer whose work appears regularly in Vogue, The
World of Interiors, AD France and Architektur & Wohnen.
Recently, he photographed Ted Muehling’s collaborations
with Nymphenburg porcelain and Stuben glass. His
work appears in galleries in the United States and in the
collections of the Victoria Albert Museum in London,
the Getty Museum in Los Angeles and others.
A dedicated website for our travel books has been set up
to allow you to browse all of the hotel selections online or
make your booking directly.
Visit www.great-escapes-hotels.comto find out more.
Opposite: Dunton Hot Springs, Dolores, Colorado Page 28:
Top left: Post Ranch Inn, Big Sur, California Top right:
Parker Palm Springs, Palm Springs, California Bottom left:
Rancho de la Osa, Tucson, Arizona Bottom right: Little
Palm Island, Little Torch Key, Florida Page 29: Top left: El
Capitan Canyon, Santa Barbara, California Top right:
Furnace Creek Inn, Death Valley, California Bottom left:
Trout Point Lodge, Kemptville, Nova Scotia, Canada Bottom
right: Madonna Inn, San Luis Obispo, California
THE HOTEL BOOK.
GREAT ESCAPES NORTH AMERICA
Text: Daisann McLane / Photos: Don Freeman /
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover, format: 23.8 x 30.2 cm
(9.4 x 11.9 in.), 400 pp.
08lf 6 Z9.99 l $ J9.99
£ 19.99 l f â.900
Highlights include:
• Blast from the past: mid-century shiny metal
trailers with period interiors in Arizona
• Shrine to 60s-70s kitsch: a California inn where
Liberace would have felt right at home
• Shabby-chic bungalows on Highway 1 in Big Sur,
California
• Supercool hot springs resort near Los Angeles
• Cedar cabins and classic raised safari tents in
California’s El Capitan Canyon
• Your own luxurious bungalow on a tiny island
in the Florida Keys
• Sleek, minimalist “boutique hotel” in New Orleans’s
French Quarter
• Deluxe wigwams in Arizona’s Navajo County
• Historic 1930s hotel in Texas where James Dean once
stayed
• Cabin treehouse 50 feet above the ground in
Washington’s Mount Rainer
• Frank Lloyd Wright house on a wooded bluff
overlooking Mirror Lake, Wisconsin
80M0 0llll0# #8l800 l0 00f0 ¶08l8 l0f l00 f08l 0l ¶00f lll0.¨—ATTITUDE, London, on the Great Escapes series
| Z8 | "80l 0ßl¶ 00 l0080 000k8 0ll0f l00 l0ll lßl0fM8ll0ß 8000l l00 M08l 008lf80l0
00l0l8, 00l l00¶ 8l80 l08l0f0 80M0 8M8Il߶ #00l0¶f8#0¶.¨—SCAN MAGAZINE, Malta, on the Great Escapes series
| J0 | "188000ß 000k8 lf890l M0 8ll 8f00ß0 l00 N0fl0 8ß0 l0l M0 800
UWE OMMER. TRANSIT
ßf00ß0 l00 N0fl0
lß 1,4Z4 08¶8
The epic voyage behind the making of the book 1000 Families
Uwe Ommer with a Massaï friend in Tanzania
Part travel journal, part scrapbook, this unique book
traces the four-year, 250,000-km journey of photographer
Uwe Ommer during the making of TASCHEN’s 1000
Families. Called a “family album of planet earth,” 1000
Families is a vast collection of portraits taken by Ommer
in over 130 countries in all corners of the world. Natur-
ally, a voyage of such epic proportions bears its fair share
of anecdotes, adventures, mishaps, and souvenirs, and
Transit traces the experience via stories and images. From
closed borders and broken bridges to late rainy seasons,
curious customs officers, thieves, coups d’état, raging
fevers, and a far from “unbreakable” Land Rover, Ommer
found truth in the maxim “just about everything that can
go wrong, will.” This amusing and original compilation
paints a vivid picture of what it’s like to travel to the most
remote corners of the globe for four years, meeting count-
less people and observing the great cultural and social
similarities and differences that mark the human race.
The photographer: Uwe Ommer was born in Bergisch-
Gladbach, Germany, in 1943. Ommer became fascinated
with photography at a young age and in 1962 moved to
Paris, where he initially worked as a photographer’s assis-
tant. Within a few years, he opened his own photography
studio, primarily shooting fashion and advertising pho-
tos. Quickly gaining respect for his work in Paris, Ommer
began showing in local galleries and eventually published
his first book Photoedition Uwe Ommer in 1979, a collec-
tion of personal and advertising works. In the following
years, he would publish five more books, among them
Black Ladies and Asian Ladies (TASCHEN). In 1996,
Ommer drastically changed gears and decided to embark
on an ambitious project: to document all types of fami-
lies on every continent at the turn of the millennium.
Armed with a Landrover, Rolleiflex camera, portable stu-
dio, and one assistant, Ommer travelled 180,000 miles
overland in the following four years, interviewing and
photographing 1,251 families. TASCHEN published 1000
Families in 2000, in October 2000 at the occasion of
the biggest outdoor photo-exhibition ever with 1,000
photographs presented in Cologne. Since then, the
exhibition has toured the world. In 2002, Uwe Ommer
was awarded an Honorary Fellowship to the Royal
Photographic Society for the impact of his lifetime
of work.
UWE OMMER. TRANSIT
AROUND THE WORLD IN 1000 FAMILIES
Uwe Ommer / Hardcover, format: 29 x 29 cm
(11.4 x 11.4 in.), 720 pp.
08lf 6 49.99 l $ â9.99
£ J4.99 l f 8.900
l0l߶8 l08l l 0890 ß090f lM8¶lß00.¨—maria-mafia, Greece, on taschen.com
| JZ | "$#8ßkl߶ 000k lf0M l00 1ß$08l8 8l80l0 l08l`8 8ß0l00f (0¶ l0 #0f080. ll`8 8l80 8 80ßllM0ß·
The world’s sharpest creative minds are in high demand
in the advertising world, because making effective ads
takes a whole lot more than just marketing know-how.
A great ad grabs the viewer’s attention and gets the point
across in an original, surprising, funny, touching, or even
shocking way. Because ads reflect global and regional
mentalities, studying them is interesting not only for
their selling points but also for what they have to say
about their clients and target audiences. This mega-
roundup of the world’s best contemporary advertise-
ments highlights the work of designers in over 50 coun-
tries. Organized by subjects, such as socio-political, food
and beverages, cars, technology, and media, the ads are
dated and annotated with information on the design
agencies, clients, and products. Also included are case
studies illustrating, for example, how an ad campaign
can be made on a small budget or how an advertisement
can be adapted for different cultures. This guide is a
must-have for advertising students and professionals,
graphic designers, and anyone who’s interested in
the different ways products are advertised around the
world.
The editor: Julius Wiedemann was born and raised in
Brazil. After studying graphic design and marketing, he
moved to Japan, where he worked in Tokyo as art editor
for digital and design magazines. Since joining TASCHEN
in Cologne, he has been building up TASCHEN’s digital
and media collection with titles such as Japanese Graphics
Now!, TASCHEN’s 1000 Favorite Websites, and Illustration
Now!.
ADVERTISING NOW. PRINT
100 8fl 0l 80lll߶
Today’s most effective and original ads
Highlights include:
• Top 20 creative networks in the world, including
Ogilvy and Mather, TBWA, Saatchi & Saatchi, BBDO,
McCann, and DDB
• Contributions from more than 200 agencies in over
50 countries
• Exclusive essays by 10 top creative directors,
including members of the Cannes Festival Jury and
Cannes Grand Prix Winners
• Award-winning campaigns of Fortune 500 companies,
such as Ford, Pfizer, Procter & Gamble, Microsoft,
Coca-Cola, Pepsi, McDonald’s, Apple, and Nike
• More than 1000 ads collected in 10 chapters: Business
& Retailers, Food & Beverages, Health & Beauty,
Home Care & Hygiene, Media, Miscellaneous,
Social & Political, Sports & Apparel, Technology &
Equipment, and Transport
ADVERTISING NOW. PRINT
Ed. Julius Wiedemann / Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 24.9 cm
(7.6 x 9.8 in.), 640 pp.
08lf 6 Z9.99 l $ J9.99
£ 19.99 l f â.900
Opposite: DDB London for VW Polo, 2005. Cannes Silver
Lion. Illustrator: Paul Slater
l8l N8lk l0f00¶0 #88l 808, M8¶8Ilß0 0090f8 8ß0 8l00M 8flN0fk.¨—TOTALLY DUBLIN, Dublin, on Illustration Now!
| J4 | "ßß0l00f 0fllll8ßl 00ll00 l80l0 l8f0 lf0M l00 ¶000 l0lk 8l 1ß$08l8. 100 l8l08l 0ll0fl߶
Neil French is a legend in the advertising industry. He
was born in 1944 and was expelled from minor Public
School at 16, which prevented him from becoming an
Army-Officer, his first ambition. With eclectic experience,
Neil has done a wide range of things over the last 30 year,
including being a rent collector, account executive, adver-
tising-manager, waiter, singer, pornographer, concert-pro-
moter, nightclub owner, rock-band manager, copywriter,
art-director, creative director, film director, actor, televi-
sion station owner, etc; some of which were concurrent
with other things. He started his own agency in 1967,
and we “spectacularly bust” in his own words. After 1975,
he joined a series of agencies, sometimes for a couple of
years, sometimes for a couple of weeks, until he joined
The Ball Partnership as Vice Chairman and Group
Creative Director. In 1992 he joined Ogilvy & Mather for
the second time as Regional Creative Director, where he
became Worldwide Creative Director in 1997. In 2002
Neil French was named Worldwide Creative Director of
WPP.
T: You always talk about the importance of copy. When you
are flicking through a magazine, for example, you see a lot of
images, and you keep flicking. Should a good ad be like a
good book that you don’t want to stop reading?
I’m just not a visual person. So I started
by writing copy, trying to copy other copy-
writers.
NF: Well, the short answer is yes, of course. But while
you’re flicking, you need an art-director to make you stop
flicking and start reading! Only then can you concentrate
on making the copy work. There’s one recent ad I wrote
that many people have asked for reprints of; it’s on walls
of copywriters’ offices all over the world...if not on the
walls of art-directors. The headline is “Nobody reads long
copy anymore. Here’s why.” And of course there are
columns of copy. Basically what it says is that if you can
write interestingly then people will read. And if they
don’t, it’s your fault for not being interesting.
T: Would you say something about advertising today?
NF: I don’t think it has changed that much since I start-
ed. It was like being an apprentice, so when I started I
looked at all the stuff that had been done before. But I
think I was the first bloke to do an ad which was entirely
copy. No picture at all. No, actually there was one before.
The first one was written by an American chap and I
think it was written for Cadillac in the 1930s or some-
thing. No picture, just text. I loved that. I fell in love with
it. For years I carried it around in a folder with me to
remind me what the masters do. It was the Mona Lisa of
copywriting. However, in those days most ads were head-
line, picture copy and logo. Certainly, when Helmut
Krone was the kingpin of the art directors and everything
was in three columns, that became the way to do it. Just
recently the whole genre has changed. I think Marcelo
Cerpa’s agency changed everything. He is a really clever
guy. He realized that he was not going to win a huge
amount of awards at Cannes with Brazilian ads because
nobody else reads Brazilian except the Portuguese. His
flight of genius was not to do any words at all. No head-
line, no nothing. Just a picture, and astounding picture
and a logo on the bottom right. He invented that, and
everyone all over the world just slavishly copied the style,
without understanding the genius of the original reason!
T: And what about your way of doing ads?
NF: I like words too much. I’m just not a visual person.
So I started by writing copy, trying to copy other copy-
writers. I copied Bill Bernbach for a while, unsuccessfully
of course. I copied David Ogilvy for a while, unsuccess-
fully of course. Then at some period I found my own
voice and then I was all right. I still prefer long copy. Let’s
say you have ten people and you show them a nice big
picture ad with the logo in the bottom right hand corner
and see what happens. Well, eight of them at least will
look at it before flicking. Two of them might look at it a
bit longer, but there is nothing else they CAN do but
look at it. You can’t do anything else. Now, if it’s a long
copy ad, and if it’s good copy, eight of them will still just
look and flick. But maybe one of them will read the first
paragraph before he flicks. And only one out of ten is
going to start, and enjoy it, and get through to the end.
But him I’ve got. I own his soul for five minutes, or what-
ever. Now I’d rather have one person completely sold on
my product, than ten who vaguely remember it. For me
that is power.
If you can get the client enthusiastic
about his own advertising that is fantastic.
T: Is it hard to get copy-ads approved these days by big
clients?
NF: I have been really lucky because I have a reputation
in Asia and the clients tend to call me personally and say
“can you do us some ads, Neil?”
If I had to go and get them on cold call I would starve. In
ADVERTISING NOW. PRINT
"l llk0 N0f08 l00 M000.¨
Interview with Neil French, Creative Director of WPP
800N08808 l00 008l l08l l00 N0fl0 0l 8ßlM8ll0ß 088 l0 0ll0f. #08lll¶ 8l0ll.¨—VOICE, Dubai, on Animation Now!
ADVERTISING NOW. PRINT
fact, in the WPP Annual there is only one copy-only ad...
and that is because the client called up and said he want-
ed one. It was great fun, because when they asked me I
said he doesn’t need a long copy ad. What he sold was
sold totally on the basis of price. His product is cheaper
than any competitor’s and as good as them all. We have
had the client for a long time. It is a hugely successful, no-
frills airline in Asia. How difficult is it to say “Everybody
else 500 dollars, us 50 dollars”? It doesn’t take creativity to
say that. Anyway the client said, “No, you misunderstand
me, Neil. I want a long copy ad.” And I said, “No, you
don’t need one.” And he said, “Let me put it another way.
Write me a long copy ad.”“Ah. I see. Right. OK.” It was a
tough job. I sat there forever throwing bits of paper into
the bin. Bad idea. Bad idea. Bad idea. And then I found a
way in. I am not sure if it is a great way in, but it an amus-
ing way in. And I wrote it, and he liked it, and it ran. I
personally doubt that it put another bum on a seat, but I
think the point was made and I think he just wanted to
prove that you can make a long copy for a cut-price prod-
uct. And he enjoyed bullying me!
T: So if you have a good idea you keep the client.
NF: If you can get the client enthusiastic about his own
advertising that is fantastic. You know, clients are not
always stupid. They frequently come up with good ideas
themselves and I am happy to go along with that. If a
client has a good idea I will say, “Oh, yes!”, and steal it, and
get an award, and keep the award, and give the client no
credit whatsoever!
Who wrote “It’s the real thing” for Coke?
Nobody knows. It went worldwide.
T: You write things for all kinds of clients. Do you think it is
better to do a worldwide campaign?
NF: No, not really. I wish it were, because wouldn’t it be
wonderful to deal with the people who approved the
new Honda ad, for example? I guess it is worldwide now
and I would have loved to have done that. But I am not
that good, I could never have done it. Everyone would
love to see their advertising worldwide. I think there is
only one campaign I have ever done which went world-
wide and that was for the United Bank of Switzerland.
Generally speaking, I tend to do everything on a local
level. I have done campaigns in Brazil for Brazilians, in
Mexico for Mexicans, in Spain for the Spanish and in
Singapore for the Singaporeans. All over, but very rarely
does it go more than regional.
T: Does it have to do with specific and more personalized
solutions? Is it also a fact that locals can usually find a better
way to tell a story?
NF: Yes, and also that I am a disbeliever in global
answers. I think people are so similar, and so different.
Actually we are more similar than we are different, Look
at a row of people from all over the world and there will
be a slight change in colour, a small change in shape, but
that is about it really. All the rest is the same. All the but-
tons that make them work are the same. But in order to
get there, that is where culture comes in. That is where
the different cultures operate on a different level. So for
Singaporeans the way to the heart is entirely different
than that for Brazilians. Germans are very different to
even the Spaniards. Or the Japanese to the Americans.
Talk about poles apart. They are planets apart. And that is
what interests me. I know where we have to get to. It’s
the road that’s interesting.
T: One would think that if you have a worldwide account
you can solve a bigger problem easier, but in the end it might
be nice also to have the pleasure to solve everything possible
around you.
NF: I find it very much more interesting to be able to go
into a town and listen to people talking about my ads.
Very rarely are they talking about a worldwide campaign.
Who remembers the name of the person who invented
the Marlboro cowboy? Somebody invented him. It is a
worldwide campaign, probably the greatest ever written,
but nobody knows who did it. Buried. It is kind of sad.
Who wrote “Just do it”? Who did the design for it, the
swoosh? I know, but I bet not one in a thousand advertis-
ing people know. Not one in several million ordinary
people. So I like the applause, I like the adulation. I am
not kidding you here. It would be foolish and stupid to
say I didn’t like it. And you just don’t get it from world-
wide accounts. You might get a lot of money for your
agency, but you don’t get famous. Creative people don’t
get rich doing worldwide campaigns. Sad, but true.
Because you are so powerful, they burry you quickly. It’s
true. I mean, who wrote “It’s the real thing” for Coke?
Nobody knows. It went worldwide. Somebody wrote it.
Why aren’t they super famous, after all it’s one of those
campaigns that changed the brand. But no.
We can’t actually pick up a product,
put it in your hands and take your money
off you.
T: What is your view on advertising as a selling tool?
NF: Yes. Well, when I grew up in this business there was
no such thing as interactive television. Interactive televi-
sion is probably the only truly direct response, where you
can press a button and buy a product. That is real direct
sale. It always amuses me when people say this is a direct
sale ad. And I say, “So what is an indirect selling ad?”
Above: TBWA/Paris for Ephydrol, 2005. Cannes Bronze Lion
for the Campaign Right: McCann Erickson Chile for Nike,
2005 Opposite page: BBDO Bangkok for Pepsi Light, 2001.
Cannes Shortlist. Photographer: Anuchai Secharunputong
| Jë | "f00'90 M8ß8¶00 l0 f0·lß90ßl l00 000k, 00߶f8l0l8ll0ß8.¨—walter rodgers, USA, on taschen.com
"l l00l 00ll0flll08 lß M¶ 8l0M800 (08l l0 800 ¶00f 000k8.¨—maria, Mexico, on taschen.com
Everybody knows that brand identity is key. A good logo
can glamorize just about anything, so it comes as no sur-
prise that logo design is a crucial step in the development
of a product or service. This exhaustive guide brings
together diverse logos from over 30 countries, organized
into chapters by theme, such as socio-political, food and
beverages, technology, and consumer products. A full
index provided at the end of the book lists each logo’s
company, designer, and designer’s website. Also included
is a case study section, concentrating on logo application
and development. No graphic designer can do without
this book, and anyone who’s interested in design will
appreciate this diverse compendium of visual ideas. As
scientist Linus Paulin once said, “In order to come up
with one good idea, you must have lots of ideas.”
The editor: Julius Wiedemann was born and raised
in Brazil. After studying graphic design and marketing,
he moved to Japan, where he worked in Tokyo as art
editor for digital and design magazines. Since joining
TASCHEN in Cologne, he has been building up
TASCHEN’s digital and media collection with titles such
as Japanese Graphics Now!, TASCHEN’s 1000 Favorite
Websites, and Illustration Now!.
LOGO NOW!
N08l`8 ¶00f 8l¶ßF
The world’s best logo designs
LOGO NOW!
Ed. Julius Wiedemann / Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 24.9 cm
(7.6 x 9.8 in.), 512 pp.
08lf 6 Z9.99 l $ J9.99
£ 19.99 l f â.900
Highlights include:
• Case studies with top design companies such as
Interbrand, Landor, Meta Design, Pentagram, Segura
Inc., Simon & Goetz, and Wolff Olins
• Contributions from more than 200 agencies in over
30 countries
• 3000 logos and more: applications and brainstorming
• Inside information from top branding companies’
projects, including Mini, Donna Karan, Houston
Rockets, and Unilever
• Contact data of all featured companies
| J8 | "N00ß ll 00M08 l0 80M0l0l߶ l88l0l0ll¶ 8M0ll¶ l0 8ll# 0ß00f ¶00f
Bill Ward’s long, prolific pin-up career began during
World War II when he created a curvy distraction named
Torchy for his fellow soldiers. His taste for impossibly
buxom blondes—teetering on stiletto heels, legs encased
in black nylon, torsos packed into satin gowns—precisely
suited America’s collective postwar sex fantasy, and the
late 50s men’s magazine boom made him the most popu-
lar girlie artist in the country. Through the 1960s, 70s, 80,
and 90s, Ward broadened his range to embrace a variety
of fetish subjects, but he never varied from his template
of the Ultimate Woman—except to make her breasts a lit-
tle bigger, her heels a little higher, or the satin and leather
encasing her a little glossier. The art of Bill Ward
(1919–1998) has become so rare and collectible that pho-
tographer and veteran TASCHEN editor Eric Kroll has
had to trawl through archives across America to assemble
this broad selection of Ward’s very best work. Drawn
from over 600 illustrations and interviews with family,
friends, employers, and even some of the women who
inspired him, this 344-page, meticulously researched
book is the definitive tribute to the great Bill Ward and
the perfect companion piece, in size and scope, to
TASCHEN’s The Art Of Eric Stanton.
The editor: Eric Kroll has worked as a photojournalist
for the New York Times, Der Spiegel, and Vogue, but is best
known for his fetish photography appearing in maga-
zines including Leg Show and High Heeled Women, and
for his TASCHEN monographs Fetish Girls and Beauty
Parade. As a TASCHEN editor, he most recently edited
Chas Ray Krider’s Motel Fetish.
THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BILL WARD,
KING OF THE GLAMOUR GIRLS
Eric Kroll / Hardcover, format: 26 x 34 cm (10.2 x 13.4 in.),
344 pp.
08lf 6 J9.99 l $ 49.99
£ Z9.99 l f ë.900
THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BILL WARD, KING OF THE GLAMOUR GIRLS
N8f0`8 N0fl0
A titillating voyage into the paradise of pin-up
“What a fantastic way for me
to meet girls. Right then and there
I decided to become an artist.”
—BILL WARD
Bill Ward. Collection of the Ward family
Opposite: Collection of Charles Martignette
00ll00 l80l0, 1ß$08l8 l8k08 l00 #f090f0l8l 0000ß0l 0f08M.¨—ATTITUDE, London
"00, l0f0 N0l080¶ ...
l N88 00¶lßßl߶ l0 l0lßk
¶00`0 ß090f ß0ll00 M0I¨
| 40 | "ßß 0ß08ß߶ l00l l0f N08l Nlll 80ll, 00M0lß00 Nll0 8 ll8lf l0f #f09008ll0ß 8ß0 80ll·#f0M0ll0ß, 088
Born in Brooklyn in 1919. Died in New Jersey in 1998.
Most of the time between those years Bill Ward spent
drawing women. Women with exaggerated bosoms,
small-waisted, long-legged, with a healthy round ass. A
fantasy woman, unless you are the actress Anita Ekberg,
Veronica Lake, or the adult model Candy Samples. They
were dressed, or sometimes partially dressed, to please his
imagination. His imagination fed the imagination of the
American male with his illustrations of women for 50
years. Bill himself conceded he probably drew more
“babes” than any other illustrator of his time. After all …
his last name spelled backwards is DRAW.
Born March 6, 1919, William Hess Ward moved with his
prosperous family from Brooklyn, NY, to Ridgewood, NJ,
where he grew up. Bill’s dad was high up in the United
Fruit Company management and wanted his son to go
into the business, but all Bill wanted to do was draw. He
returned to Brooklyn and went to college at the Pratt
Institute, graduating in 1941.
“I believe in glamour combined with sex.”
After being drafted and serving in the Army, Ward
returned to Ridgewood, married twice, and lived out
much of his adult life in the town where he was raised.
Taken from the monologue in Reb Stout’s very fine video
The Wonderful Women of Ward, Ward’s own words provide
an overview: “Fans have written to me about the incredi-
ble volume of my work over the years. And it’s occurred
to me that I may have had more work published than
anyone in the history of the world. Now, it would have to
be in the last 50 years and it would have to be in the
United States. There just wasn’t the market for volume
work the way there is now. There’s the comic strips, the
gags, and so on. That’s where the bulk of the work would
be. Now, for example, when I was in the Binder shop I
laid out literally thousands of pages, seven panels per
page. And this is when I was just a kid. Then all the work
I did during the war and afterwards. The work in
Humorama, for example, the largest purchaser of car-
toons in the world. And he bought 30 a month from me
from 1947 through ‘67. Now that’s 20 years and that
comes to a total of 7,200 drawings, just gags, for one out-
fit. Then there’s comic strips that I’ve done since then.
And remember, each strip has seven panels. And there
were 20 individual drawings each month for that. Well, I
never ever could figure out how much but …There’s
only one person that I can think of that may have pro-
duced as much and that’s Jack Kirby. He started out when
I did and created Captain America and then he went on
later to produce Spider-Man and The Hulk. And, of
course, he does seven panels on a page and he’s been
working as many years as I have. But, he’s the only one
that I can think of, so there’s a good chance that I may
have produced more work than anyone in the history of
the world. It’s awesome.”
After college Bill got a job with Jack Binder, drawing
background art for one of the first big comic book pro-
duction houses. Binder moved his shop from the Bronx
to Englewood, New Jersey. As his business expanded,
Binder asked Ward to find other artists to help at the
shop. Ward got dozens of his fraternity brothers hired
which, unbeknownst to them, helped begin the ‘Golden
Era’ of comic books. Ward concedes that this was one of
the high points in his life. He and his co-workers got to
play baseball at lunch in a nearby field. Bill was a sports
nut his entire life—darts, golf, and baseball, among others.
Besides, he was enjoying the camaraderie he experienced
working side by side with talented artist friends, day after
day. The war tore the group apart, but also opened up
opportunities. Reed Crandall, creator of Blackhawk, got
drafted. George Brenner, head editor at Quality Comics,
hired Bill to replace him.
“One can only wonder what fertile
dreams Bill Ward had.
In a matter of minutes, he put every man’s
dreams on paper.” —ERIC KROLL
Then Bill got drafted into the army and stationed at a
naval base in Rhode Island. To earn extra money, Ward
THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BILL WARD, KING OF THE GLAMOUR GIRLS
100 008l 0¶0 08ß0¶
M0ß0¶ 08ß 00¶
The life of Bill Ward, good girl artist. By Eric Kroll
“Doris, now you’re the only thing
I have left in the world... DORIS!”
00l#00 08l80ll80l߶ l00 1ß$08l8 ß8M0 ß08f l00 l0# 0l l00 8fl #00ll80l߶ N0fl0.¨— INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, Paris
THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BILL WARD, KING OF THE GLAMOUR GIRLS
began drawing for Wendell Crowley, his buddy from the
Binder days, who was working for Fawcett Publications.
Within a short time, Ward was approached by the mili-
tary to draw a comic strip to boost morale that would
appear in the local naval base newspaper. Ack-Ack-Amy
was born, which later evolved into Torchy, a statuesque,
curvaceous blonde bombshell that was probably the most
famous paper woman to come out of World War II!
After Ward got out of the army, he returned to Quality
Comics to work on Romance Comics. After all, he was
now well versed in drawing the female form. Soon he
was recreating Torchy and by 1949, she had her own
book (comic).
Several years later, comics came under attack by the
Federal government and that, coupled with the advent of
television, meant the Golden Age of comics including
Torchy, came to an end.
Ward shifted his hand to ‘girlie’ art. He found his savior
in Abe Goodman, publisher of Humorama, which
encompassed dozens of small gag cartoon digests. Bill
favored conte crayon because he felt he could work faster.
The nature of the medium necessitated big pieces of art
work. These doe-eyed, big breasted women are the signa-
ture for Bill Ward. Much of what is in The Wonderful
World of Bill Ward comes from this period. The women
are comely, the images humorous, or bawdy. Raunchy, yet
innocent.
Dian Hanson, Ward’s editor at Juggs and Leg Show during
the later period of his life, said it best: “With the Contes,
Bill Ward was able to render nylon and leather in a dis-
tinctive way that made his illustrations and cartoons
memorable and set him apart from the other cartoonists
of the era—it really gave him his fetish edge. Fetish has to
do not with the flesh but with the costuming of the flesh
and the Conte gave Ward that control. It gave him the
ability to make the textures that were stimulating to men,
to put them into the picture …The Contes were always
memorable. When you saw a Conte in a magazine you
may not have known what was alluring, but if you
looked it was the leather and the nylon and the satin …
No one else was doing fabrics. It was fetishistic. People
may not have been aware that they were responding to
fetishistic cues, but that’s what it was.”
Bill had a long and extensive career. He would draw any-
thing. Besides working for Humorama, Bill drew for Bob
Sproul’s Cracked magazine, Eros Goldstripe’s adult book
covers, and Mavety’s Leg Show magazine when the divine
Miss Dian Hanson was editor. Ward started a greeting
card company, had his own mail order business like artist
Eric Stanton and drew and drew and drew. He also
wrote. He wrote many of the gag lines for Abe Goodman
and in his later years wrote and illustrated, once a month,
an article for the big-titted Mavety magazine Juggs.
Towards the end of his career he drew transvestites in
action and even some bdsm fetish art.
I traversed the US to make this book, photographing
Ward art in basements from as far away as Detroit,
Michigan, to as close as across town, in my home town,
San Francisco. His work is coveted like a rare coin and
difficult to find…until now. Now, upon your lap can lie
a drawn woman with legs covered in nylon, heels higher
than a spike, breasts the size of watermelons, gloves to
the armpits and earrings dangling like mini-chandeliers.
Bill Ward is a man who loved women.
It’s hard…but…a Bill Ward is a Bill Ward is a Bill Ward.
Opposite page: Left: Illustrated self-potrait. Collection of
the Ward family Right: Fun House (1970). Collection of the
Ward family This page: “Inside Job” by Jon Parker; Wee
Hours No. 545 (1967)
| 4Z | "ßf00ll00l0f0 80NI J M8¶ 00 l00 #0fl00l 000k l0 ¶l90 l0 lfl0ß08 N00 8f0 l088 l08ß
8899¶ 8000l 08l80ll8000 8ß0 fl8l߶ 8f00ll00l0f0 8l8f8.¨—THE ARCHITECT’S NEWSPAPER, New York
Volume 4 proves that the best keeps getting better, with
new names from all over the world and the most exciting
and unique buildings and designs. As always, easy-to-
navigate illustrated A-Z entries include current and recent
projects, biographies, contact information, and website
addresses.
Here are just a few of the projects that
are featured in the new book:
• A shelter for the needy made out of sandbags
• “Nomadic Museum” made by Shigeru Ban out of
shipping containers
• A tree house in Germany
• Extraordinary museums that will never be built in
Lausanne and Guadalajara
• New museums that have been built by Gehry, Mansilla
and Tuñón, or Richard Meier
• BMW Central Building in Leipzig by Zaha Hadid
• Allianz Arena by Herzog & de Meuron
• Wedding Chapel in Japan
• Design hotels in Berlin and Saõ Paulo or Cerro
Paranal, Chile
• Library in Seattle by Rem Koolhaas/OMA
• Houses in Mexico City, Saõ Paulo, Corsica, Hiroshima,
or Great Mackerel Beach, Australia
• Spoon des Neiges by Patrick Jouin
• A tower that will grow like a tree in New York
• With-it architects like David Adjaye, Caramel, Graftlab,
Jakob+MacFarlane, Asymptote or Lewis Tsurumaki Lewis
• Artists who take on architectural space, like Frank
Stella or Bill Viola, or architects who are interested in
art, like Peter Eisenman
• The E-House, architecture that is greener than green
• From the minimal (David Chipperfield and John
Pawson) to the decidedly exotic (Longitude 131, Uluru-
Kata National Park, Northern Territory, Australia)
The author: Philip Jodidio studied art history and eco-
nomics at Harvard University, and was editor-in-chief
of the leading French art journal Connaissance des Arts for
over two decades. He has published numerous articles
and books, including TASCHEN’s Architecture Now
series, Building a New Millennium, and monographs on
Norman Foster, Richard Meier, Alvaro Siza, Tadao Ando,
and Renzo Piano.
ARCHITECTURE NOW! VOL. 4
ßf00ll00l8 8l l00
00lll߶ 00¶0
ARCHITECTURE NOW! VOL. 4
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.6 x 9.8 in.), 576 pp.
08lf 6 Z9.99 l $ J9.99
£ 19.99 l f â.900
Opposite: Patrick Jouin, Chlösterli, Gstaad, Switzerland
VOL. 3
WINNER OF THE
SAINT-ETIENNE PRIZE
FOR THE BEST
ARCHITECTURE
AND DESIGN BOOK
OF 2004
| 44 | "0f00 @00 M0 08l0¶ 90l9l0ß00 80l0l0 8 l08 ll0f08 00 188000ß.¨—german campos, Spain, on taschen.com
ARCHITECTURE IN JAPAN
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover, format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm
(9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 19.99 l $ Z4.99
£ 14.99 l f J.900
In Praise of Ambiguity
Slightly smaller than California, Japan has a much larger
population, estimated at 127,417,244 in July 2005. Over
the past decade, the population has increased by approx-
imately two million people, but overall, the Japanese are
aging. Certainly the largest modern city in the world,
Tokyo, with only 0.6% of the total area of Japan, is home
to 10% of its inhabitants, creating an extreme density of
5,655 persons per square kilometer. A large part of the
eastern seaboard of the country, between Tokyo and Osaka,
is almost a continuous urban area, while to the west, more
mountainous and less densely settled areas exist. These
facts, and in particular the urban density of the country,
are important to understanding its architecture, particular-
ly where residential construction is concerned. Another
significant factor in Japanese architecture is the underlying
sense of fragility born of catastrophes. Successive disasters,
some natural and some man-made, have shaped the con-
temporary face of Tokyo, for example. The first of these in
the 20th century was the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923,
measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale, which may have killed
200,000 and left 64% of the remaining population home-
less. The second, even more radical in its destruction, was
the American firebombing of the city between March and
May of 1945. More people died in those months than in
the instantaneous devastation of Hiroshima. By September
1945, the population which had exceeded 6.9 million in
1942, had dropped through death and emigration to
2,777,000. Incendiary devices, dropped on a city constitut-
ed mostly of wooden structures, were particularly efficient.
For this reason, it can be said that the largest city on earth
has been built almost entirely since 1945. At the outset,
this construction went forward with limited means. As in
war-torn Europe, it was essential to build cheaply and fast.
In more recent times, an implacable commercial logic
which has little to do with the canons of esthetics has been
the dominant influence. In a sense, this tidal wave of bad
architecture is the second man-made disaster in Tokyo’s
recent history. It has swept before it much of the beauty of
centuries-old tradition.
ARCHITECTURE SERIES
ßf00ll00l0f8l lf0ß08
lf0M N00ßl f0(l .
Architects/firms included:
HITOSHI ABE
Aoba-Tei Restaurant / Sendai, Miyagi
TADAO ANDO
4 x 4 House II / Kobe, Hyogo
hhstyle.com/ Casa / Shibuya-Ku,
Tokyo
JUN AOKI
Louis Vuitton Roppongi Hills / Minato-
Ku, Tokyo
SHIGERU BAN
Shutter House for a Photographer /
Minato-Ku, Tokyo
Glass Shutter House / Meguro-Ku,
Tokyo
SHUHEI ENDO
Springtecture O-Rush
Tenpaku / Nagoya, Nagoya
ENDOH & IKEDA
Natural Wedge / Suginami-Ku, Tokyo
HIROSHI HARA
Orimoto House / Uchiko, Ehime
ARATA ISOZAKI
Yamaguchi Center for Arts and
Media / Yamaguchi, Yamaguchi
TOYO ITO
Tod’s Omotesando / Shibuya-Ku, Tokyo
I-Project / Fukuoka, Fukuoka
WARO KISHI
Luna de Miele
Omotesando / Shibuya-Ku, Tokyo
House in Yoyogi-uehara / Shibuya-Ku,
Tokyo
KENGO KUMA
Fukusaki Hanging Garden / Osaka, Osaka
Nagasaki Prefecture Art
Museum/ Nagasaki, Nagasaki
FUMIHIKO MAKI
TVAsahi Headquarters / Minato-Ku,
Tokyo
SEJIMA+NISHIZAWA/SANAA
21st Century Museum of Contemporary
Art / Kanazawa, Ishikawa
Christian Dior OmoteSando / Shibuya-
Ku, Tokyo
YOSHIO TANIGUCHI
Gallery of Horyuji Treasures /
Taito-Ku, Tokyo
TEZUKA ARCHITECTS
Observatory House / Kamakura,
Kanagawa
Matsunoyama Natural Science
Museum/ Matsunoyama, Niagata
MAKOTO SEI WATANABE
Shin Minamata Station and Minamata-
mon / Minamata, Kumamoto
MAKOTO YOKOMIZO
Tomihiro Art Museum/ Azuma, Gunma
"l llk0 ¶00f 000k8, l00lf f080l߶ l8 8N00l¶, 0000ßlfl0 8ß0 lßl0fM8ll90.¨—Mastoc.com, France, on taschen.com
ARCHITECTURE SERIES
. l0 l00 l0Nl8ß08 .
From Rembrandt to Rem
Dutch architecture and design are hot. Beneath an out-
ward appearance of dullness or dryness lies an adventur-
ous heart, and a willingness to go where few creators
have gone before them. Rotterdam’s own Rem Koolhaas
(OMA) straddles the globe much like his huge new
CCTV Tower will soon straddle Beijing, while his
younger colleagues, such as Lars Spuybroek (NOX) imag-
ine houses that sing and dance. Nor does Dutch inven-
tiveness stop at pure architecture. Droog Design does fur-
niture, and West 8 creates gardens all over the world.
Though predictions are made regularly about the end of
this “golden age” of Dutch architecture, each year brings a
remarkable new crop of projects and completed build-
ings, confirming this small nation as one of the real cre-
ative leaders in Europe, if not the world.
As Aaron Betsky, the director of the Netherlands
Architecture Institute in Rotterdam wrote in his recent
book False Flat, Why Dutch Design is so Good, “Dutch
architects such as MVRDV are exporting the lessons they
learned designing social housing all over the world, and
Dutch industrial, graphic and furniture designers are
picking up commissions in the United States, Europe
and Asia. In the recent competition for redesigning
Ground Zero in New York, three of the seven teams
included Dutch architects …For a small country, the
Netherlands exerts amazing influence.” Nor is this posi-
tive attitude toward the Netherlands reserved to the
already famous. Burton Hamfelt, a Canadian who is one
of the principals of S 333, a young Amsterdam firm made
up almost entirely of foreigners, says, “The Netherlands
was a strategic choice to open an office for us; location,
work climate, an enthusiastic design culture—our mixed
backgrounds made this the most interesting location to
also explore the world. The Netherlands is promoted as a
kind of Hollywood for architects. If you want to become
an actor, you go to Hollywood; if you want to become an
architect, you come here. Even though the situation is
clearly different now, there is still no other country where
the design culture is omnipresent.”
TASCHEN’s new architecture series brings
a unique perspective to world architecture,
highlighting architectural trends by
country. Each book features 15 to 20
architects—from the firmly established to
the up-and-coming—with the focus on how
they have contributed to very recent archi-
tecture in the chosen nation. Entries include
contact information and short biographies
in addition to copiously illustrated descrip-
tions of the architects’ or firms’ most signifi-
cant recent projects. Crossing the globe from
country to country, this new series celebrates
the richly hued architectural personality of
each nation featured.
Series author: Philip Jodidio studied art history and
economics at Harvard University, and was editor-in-chief
of the leading French art journal Connaissance des Arts
for over two decades. He has published numerous articles
and books, including TASCHEN’s Architecture Now series,
Building a New Millennium, and monographs on Norman
Foster, Richard Meier, Alvaro Siza, Tadao Ando, and
Renzo Piano.
TASCHEN’s
NEW
ARCHITECTURE
SERIES
ARCHITECTURE IN THE NETHERLANDS
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover, format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm
(9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 19.99 l $ Z4.99
£ 14.99 l f J.900
Architects/firms included:
WIEL ARETS
University Library / Utrecht
Colophon Stylesuite / Maastricht
ERICK VAN EGERAAT
Popstage / Breda
City Hall / Alphen Aan Den Rijn
HERMAN HERTZBERGER
Watervilla / Middelburg
Coda Cultural Center / Apeldoorn
MEYER EN VAN SCHOOTEN
Shoebaloo / Amsterdam
Blok 3 / Almere
MVRDV
Lloyd Hotel / Amsterdam
Patio Housing / Ypenburg
NEUTELINGS RIEDIJK
5 Sfinxen Housing / Huizen
Shipping And Transport College /
Rotterdam
NOX
Club.House / Rotterdam
Hunk Youth Centers / Various
Locations
OMA/REM KOOLHAAS
Blok 6 / Almere
Souterrain / The Hague
ONL
Acoustic Barrier / Leidsche Rijn /
Utrecht
DIRK JAN POSTEL
Town Hall / ’S-Hertogenbosch
SEARCH
Tea Pavilion / Rheden
Wolzak Farmhouse / Zutphen
UN STUDIO
La Defense / Almere
Theater / Lelystad
KOEN VAN VELSEN
Media Authority Building / Hilversum
Kennispoort / Eindhoven
RENÉ VAN ZUUK
Arcam Architectuurcentrum /
Amsterdam
Blok 16 / Almere
| 4ë | "880M0l8l0f. $l0 ¶000ß fl8¶80l#8l0f08, N0800ß, 88ßk0ß 0ß0 l0K089lll0ß 0lß 608l00l. 0l080ß k0ß8ll0fß
ARCHITECTURE SERIES
. l0 l8k0 60ß098 .
ARCHITECTURE IN SWITZERLAND
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover, format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm
(9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 19.99 l $ Z4.99
£ 14.99 l f J.900
Swiss Made Architecture
Imagine a landlocked country less than twice the size of
New Jersey, with a population even smaller than that of
the American state (7,489,370—July 2005 est.). It shares
borders with its larger and more powerful neighbors,
France, Germany and Italy. This country has four official
languages and a history that goes back to the year 1291.
These might not seem to be ideal circumstances for the
creation of a culture of contemporary architecture, and
yet Switzerland appears to be more convinced of its often
austere modernity than most other European countries.
It is no accident that the country’s ten-franc bill carries a
portrait of Le Corbusier.
Often thought to be French, Charles-Édouard Jeanneret
was of course born in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland, in
1887. The unusual mixture of strong and ancient nation-
al traditions with a fascination for structural innovation
has also been expressed in Switzerland through its engi-
neers. Robert Maillart (born in Bern in 1872—died in
1940) is best known for his elegant and radically innova-
tive bridges, based on the use of flat and curved slabs of
reinforced concrete. Maillart’s education and career offer
one answer to the enigma of the creativity of modern
Swiss architecture and engineering. He obtained his
degree from the Federal Polytechnic Institute (ETH) in
Zurich in 1894, and taught there for several years after
1912.
As small and landlocked as it may be, Switzerland has
affirmed its modernity even as its mountain communi-
ties often recycle traditional chalet forms to the point of
over-consumption. Where cow bells and chocolate occu-
py the tourist’s superficial vision of a charming kitsch
universe, an even cursory overview of Switzerland’s con-
temporary architecture reveals a commitment to a strong
but perhaps austere vision of new buildings. Inclined to
quality construction, perhaps because of its combination
of wealth and a harsh winter climate, Switzerland’s con-
temporary architecture occupies a place apart in Europe.
Though currents from France, Germany or Italy flow
strongly through its designs, Swiss architecture schools,
the ETH Zurich and the EPFL in particular, assure that
locally produced talent will continue to form the core of
its population of designers and engineers.
Like a bridge by Robert Maillart, it may be expected that
Swiss architecture will nurture its very special combina-
tion of audacity and innovation, allied to solidity.
Architects/firms included:
MARIO BOTTA
Bodmer Library And Museum /
Cologny, Geneva
Tour De Moron / Malleray, Jura
SANTIAGO CALATRAVA
Law Faculty Library / Zurich, Zurich
ALDO CELORIA
Travella House / Castel San Pietro,
Ticino
Trapanese House / Castel San Pietro,
Ticino
JÜRG CONZETT
Suransuns Footbridge / Viamala,
Graubünden
DEVANTHÉRY & LAMUNIÈRE
Primary School / Rolle, Vaud
DIENER & DIENER
Migros Shopping Center & Club
School / Lucerne, Lucerne
Novartis Pharma Headquarters / Basel,
Basel-Stadt
E2A
Broëlberg Housing Complex /
Kilchberg, Zurich
NORMAN FOSTER
Chesa Futura / St Moritz, Graubünden
FUHRIMANN + HÄCHLER
Residence, Uetliberg / Zurich,
Zurich
PATRICK GARTMANN
Gartmann House / Chur, Graubünden
Gigon / Guyer
Kunst-Depot Henze & Ketterer /
Wichtrach, Bern
Villa Annamaria / Kastanienbaum,
Lucerne
HERZOG & DE MEURON
Schaulager / Münchenstein,
Basel-Land
DAVIDE MACULLO
House / Gorduno, Ticino
VALERIO OLGIATI
Yellow House / Flims, Graubünden
Peak Gornergrat / Zermatt,
Valais
University Of Lucerne / Lucerne
RENZO PIANO
Paul Klee Center / Bern, Bern
PHILIPPE RAHM
Hormonorium, Swiss Pavilion /
Architecture Biennale 8, Venice
PETER ZUMTHOR
Thermal Baths / Vals, Graubünden
Klangkörper (Sound Box), Swiss
Pavilion / Expo 2000, Hanover
Single-Family House / Jenaz,
Graubünden
TASCHEN’s new architecture series brings
a unique perspective to world architecture,
highlighting architectural trends by
country. Each book features 15 to 20
architects—from the firmly established to
the up-and-coming—with the focus on how
they have contributed to very recent archi-
tecture in the chosen nation. Entries include
contact information and short biographies
in addition to copiously illustrated descrip-
tions of the architects’ or firms’ most signifi-
cant recent projects. Crossing the globe from
country to country, this new series celebrates
the richly hued architectural personality of
each nation featured.
Series author: Philip Jodidio studied art history and
economics at Harvard University, and was editor-in-chief
of the leading French art journal Connaissance des Arts
for over two decades. He has published numerous articles
and books, including TASCHEN’s Architecture Now series,
Building a New Millennium, and monographs on Norman
Foster, Richard Meier, Alvaro Siza, Tadao Ando, and
Renzo Piano.
TASCHEN’s
NEW
ARCHITECTURE
SERIES
0ß0 l0f0ß 8#0kl8k0l8f8l0ß Ff0(0kl0ß l8l 088 l00k000k ßf00ll00l0f0 80NI 4 ¶0Nl0M0l.¨—ELLE, Munich
ARCHITECTURE SERIES
. 8ß0 80f088
l00 l߶ll80 008ßß0l
ARCHITECTURE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover, format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm
(9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 19.99 l $ Z4.99
£ 14.99 l f J.900
Adventures in the Shire
The cover of a recent Spanish magazine featuring con-
temporary British architecture resembled nothing so
much as an advertisement for The War of the Worlds.
Hulking over the austere white and gray forms of David
Chipperfield’s London studio for Antony Gormley, the
improbable shapes of Future Systems’ Selfridges store in
Birmingham and Will Alsop’s College of Art and Design
in Toronto appeared to be doing gruesome battle over
some decidedly insular territory. The Spanish photomon-
tage gives no clue as to which style would be the victor,
but it does hint at the remarkable variety seen in the
contemporary architecture of the United Kingdom.
Although some prestigious and creative English-based
designers, ranging from Lord Norman Foster to Zaha
Hadid and Foreign Office Architects (FOA), do their
most important work outside the UK, a brief overview
of recent building in the country shows solutions varying
from minimalist rigor to pop art excess. But then few
other countries manage to simultaneously nurture cen-
turies old traditions while spawning music groups like
the Sex Pistols. Or perhaps stark contrast and deeply
divided aesthetics are just a sign of the times.
The English fashion designer John Galliano has run
roughshod over the staid lines of Dior, somehow giving
new luster to a worn-out brand. Inspiration for young
architects, too? And if English design triumphs abroad,
just how insular can it really be?
In the image of London itself, contemporary architecture
in the UK is something of a cosmopolitan melting pot.
Architects featured in this book and based mostly in the
capital were born in Baghdad, Dar-Es-Salaam, Shiraz,
Madrid, Zlin (Czech Republic), or Poole, Dorset. The
point of this volume is not to give an exhaustive evalua-
tion of architecture in the UK, but to select a number
of very recent buildings that, taken together, are some-
thing of a barometer of the situation in 2005.
Architects/firms included:
DAVID ADJAYE
Idea Store, Chrisp Street / Tower
Hamlets, London
Idea Store, Whitechapel / Tower
Hamlets, London
WILL ALSOP
Ben Pimlott Building Goldsmiths
College / Lewisham, London
Fawood Children’s Centre / Harlesden,
London
CARUSO ST JOHN
Gagosian Gallery / Camden, London
Art Gallery / Walsall
LAURIE CHETWOOD
Butterfly House / Surrey
DAVID CHIPPERFIELD
Gormley Studio / Islington, London
The Hepworth / Wakefield
EDWARD CULLINAN
Downland Gridshell / Singleton,
West Sussex
DECOI
Bankside Paramorph / Bankside,
London
Ellis Williams
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Arts /
Gateshead
FOA
BBC Music Center / Hammersmith and
Fulham, London
2012 Olympics / Stratford, London
NORMAN FOSTER
30 St Mary Axe Swiss-Re Headquarters /
City of London, London
The Sage / Gateshead
NICHOLAS GRIMSHAW
Bath Spa / Bath
Eden Project / Bodelva, Cornwall
ZAHA HADID
Glasgow Museum of Transport /
Glasgow
Architecture Foundation Building /
Bankside, London
MICHAEL HOPKINS
Wellcome Trust Gibbs Building /
Camden, London
Cathedral Refectory / Norwich
EVA JIRICNA
Private Residence, Belgravia / City of
Westminster, London
Boodle & Dunthorne / Liverpool
RICHARD ROGERS
Chiswick Park / Chiswick, London
Mossbourne Community Academy /
Hackney, London
| 48 | "88ß80ß`8 000k l8 8ß 0K0lll߶ 0000M0ßl8ll0ß 0l l00
TOM POULTON. THE SECRET ART OF AN ENGLISH GENTLEMAN
"1ß$08l8 0ß08fl08 8ß 88l0ßl80l߶
08000 0l Ml0·00ßl0f¶ l߶ll80 0f0ll08,
l0ll 0l 8l¶ 00M00f, 0f0l0 #888l0ß
8ß0 M0l880K08l 80#0l8ll08ll0ß.¨
The actual book is completely smiley-free!
FOR ADULTS ONLY!
TOM POULTON. THE SECRET ART
OF AN ENGLISH GENTLEMAN
Ed. Dian Hanson / Jamie Maclean / Hardcover,
format: 21 x 29.3 cm (8.3 x 11.5 in.), 224 pp.
08lf 6 Z9.99 l $ J9.99
£ 19.99 l f â.900
Opposite: Soft graphite pencil with pen and ink on tissue,
21.6 x 27.9 cm (8.5 x 10.9 in.), c. 1962
Thomas Leycester Poulton was an English magazine and
medical book illustrator, born in 1897. Upon his death in
1963 it was discovered he was also a prolific and imagina-
tive erotic artist who produced hundreds of sketches and
finished drawings of women proudly and exuberantly
displaying themselves in ways shocking to conservative
post-war Britain. Once one gets past the shock value it
becomes clear that Poulton’s greatest talent was in por-
traying the human body in the sexual act, and since he
did it with such rare insight many have argued he must
have actually witnessed the orgies he put on paper. His
ties to certain players in the 1963 Profumo scandal,
breaking at the time of his death, hint that he may, in
fact, have been the in-house artist at the parties that
rocked British Parliament. Poulton’s archive remained
hidden from public view until the late ‘90s, when it
turned up among the artifacts of an aging professional
yachtsman who was dispersing his vast collection of eroti-
ca. Though Tom Poulton’s work tells us much about
English society between 1948 and 1963, there is a univer-
sal quality to these images of joyous, uninhibited sexuali-
ty that transcends time and place.
The editor: Dian Hanson is a twenty-five-year veteran
of men’s magazine publishing, including the titles
Partner, Oui, Hooker, Juggs and Leg Show. Most recently,
she authored TASCHEN’s Dian Hanson’s: The History of
Men’s Magazines six-volume set.
The author: Jamie Maclean is co-founder of the Erotic
Print Society and since 1993 has kept busy publishing
limited editions of rare antique and contemporary erotic
art. He lives in London, England.
00ß8l8ßl 008߶08 lß M8l0 008lf08.¨—PLAYBOY, Munich, on The History of Men’s Magazines
| â0 | "100 0fllll8ßl l000ßl@00 8ß0 8kllll0l #f080ßl8ll0ß 0l 0l8 9l0008 8ß0 8llll8
THE ROY STUART COLLECTION
80¶ $l08fl`8 008l l0¶ $00N
M8¶8Ilß0 8l0fl08,
0ß00l 8ß0 0ß00ß80f00
In 1993, Roy Stuart began producing monthly photo sto-
ries for Leg Show magazine, working closely with then-
editor Dian Hanson to tailor his work to the magazine’s
demanding audience—fetishists with many diverse inter-
ests including bare feet, high heels, all manner of modern
and vintage lingerie, voyeurism, female dominance, and
body hair. Some of these interests, like body hair and
panties, dovetailed nicely with Stuart’s own tastes, while
others were a less comfortable fit, as Stuart was never
actually a fan of the complex wardrobe beloved by Leg
Show readers and provided by Hanson each month.
Nevertheless, despite disagreements and outright battles,
they managed to work together until August 2001, dur-
ing which time Stuart produced what many consider his
finest work. The five little books in this boxed set contain
a selection of 34 stories created for Leg Show between
1995 and 2001. For the first time, each story is presented
full length and complete, for a total of 960 pages of
uncensored Roy Stuart. Consider it the ultimate gift of
love, and remember that loving starts with loving oneself.
The editor: Dian Hanson is a twenty-five-year veteran
of men’s magazine publishing. She began her career at
Puritan Magazine in 1976 and went on to edit a variety of
titles, including Partner, Oui, Hooker, Outlaw Biker, and
Juggs magazines. In 1987 she took over the ‘60s title Leg
Show and transformed it into the world’s best-selling
fetish publication. Most recently, she authored
TASCHEN’s Terryworld, Tom of Finland: The Comic
Collection and Dian Hanson’s History of Men’s Magazines
six-volume set.
FOR ADULTS ONLY!
THE ROY STUART COLLECTION
Dian Hanson / 5 volumes in a slipcase, format:
9.7 x 14 cm (3.8 x 5.5 in.), 960 pp.
08lf 6 Z9.99 l $ J9.99
£ 19.99 l f â.900
#f080ßl 80K08lll¶ 0lf00ll¶ 8ß0 Nll000l #f000f¶.¨—PENTHOUSE, London, on Roy Stuart. Vol. 3
| âZ | "ll l80l f0ß0f0 00MM8¶0 8 l`00ll00f 1ß$08l8 00 f0ß0f0 800088l0l08 008 #0lll8 ll9f08
CASE STUDY HOUSES
The pioneering project that sought to bring
modernism to the masses
Elizabeth A.T. Smith
The Case Study House program (1945–1966) was an
exceptional, innovative event in the history of American
architecture and remains to this day unique. The pro-
gram, which concentrated on the Los Angeles area and
oversaw the design of 36 prototype homes, sought to
make available plans for modern residences that could be
easily and cheaply constructed during the postwar build-
ing boom. Highly experimental, the program generated
houses that were designed to redefine the modern home,
and thus had a pronounced influence on architecture—
American and international—both during the program’s
existence and even to this day. This compact guide
includes all the projects featured in our XL version, with
over 150 photos and plans and a map of where all houses
are (or were) located.
LOUIS ISIDORE KAHN
The late bloomer
Joseph Rosa
Though Louis Isidore Kahn (1901–1974) started his
career late in his life, the few projects he was able to
undertake were realized to perfection. With the Jonas
Salk Institute in La Jolla, California (1959–1965) Kahn
created a workspace with superb functional and aesthetic
qualities; the institute’s Minimalist elements radiate a
sense of eternal beauty. The Kimbell Art Museum in Fort
Worth (1966–1972) occupies the somewhat faceless city
like an island of spiritual space, an effect that is achieved
by simplicity in design and materials. Also, the Indian
Institute of Management in Ahmedabad (1962–1974)
and the Sher-e-Bangla Nagar, National Assembly of
Bangladesh in Dhaka that was finished after his death are
buildings of monumental importance. This book brings
together 17 Kahn projects, ranging from private housing
to commercial architecture, religious buildings, exhibi-
tion spaces, and government buildings.
MIES VAN DER ROHE
Less is more: finding perfection in purity
Claire Zimmerman
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969) was one of the
founding fathers of modern architecture. He was the cre-
ator of the Barcelona Pavilion (1929), the Farnsworth
House in Plano, Illinois (1945–1951) and the Seagram
Building in New York (1954–1958). Well known for his
motto “less is more,” he sought a kind of refined purity in
architectural expression. His goal was not simply building
for those of modest income (“Existenzminimum”) but
building economically in terms of sustainability, both in a
technical and aesthetical way; the use of industrial materi-
als such as steel and glass were the foundation of this
approach. Though the extreme reduction of form and
material in his work garnered some criticism, over the years
many have tried—mostly unsuccessfully—to copy his orig-
inal and elegant style. This book explores more than 20 of
his projects between 1906 and 1967, from his early work
around Berlin to his most important American buildings.
BASIC ARCHITECTURE—NEW TITLES
"lß l00 888l0 ßf00ll00l0f0 80fl08
1ß$08l8 #f080ßl8 l00 '000f·¥8l0f`
0l M000fß 8f00ll00l0f0.¨
—ARCHITEKTUR AKTUELL, Vienna
BASIC ARCHITECTURE
Ed. Peter Gössel / Softcover, flaps,
format: 18.5 x 23 cm (7.3 x 9.1 in.), 96 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
0Klf0M0M0ßl 0l0ß l8ll8 80f l08 8f00ll00l08 lß00ßl00fß80l08.¨—D’ARCHITECTURES, Paris, on Basic Architecture series
BASIC ART—NEW TITLES
ßfl 0ß 8 000¶0l.
l00 008l l0f l088
DÜRER
Germany’s greatest Renaissance artist
Norbert Wolf
Though he is most famous for his engravings, Albrecht
Dürer (1471–1528) was also a master painter and drafts-
man whose work exemplifies the spirit of German art.
Dürer’s importance in the German High Renaissance was
such that he can be considered to embody the movement
entirely. His visits to Italy (where he studied most notably
with Giovanni Bellini) had a profound effect on his artis-
tic development and enabled him to combine both
German and Italian influences in his work. In his later
life, Dürer’s passion for knowledge and progress led him
to research and write on the subjects of art theory and
mathematics, making him not only the greatest Northern
European artist of his time, but also one of its leading
thinkers. This overview of Dürer’s entire oeuvre—cover-
ing his oil, tempera, and watercolor paintings, copper
and wood engravings, and his drawings and sketches—is
the perfect introduction to his work.
TITIAN
The Venetian virtuoso
Ian G. Kennedy
A leading artist in the High Renaissance, Titian (Tiziano
Vecelli, 1488–1576) was the Venetian school’s greatest
painter and is one of the best-loved Italian artists of all
time. Titian was highly regarded during his lifetime, and
his renown has not diminished in the intervening cen-
turies; so great was his ability to manipulate color, tex-
ture, and tone that he is still considered to be one of art
history’s greatest technical masters. The freedom exhibit-
ed in his pictorial compositions was unprecedented and
greatly influential on later artists, notably Manet, who
closely studied Titian’s work at the Louvre. This book
examines Titian’s evolution, from his early years training
under Giovanni Bellini to his later mature work, giving
a wide perspective on the life’s work of this legendary
master painter.
“Vasarely contains the main
ideas of the man, thoroughly
illustrated and although
philosophical texts can be dry
to read, this edition, on the
contrary, is accessible and
hard to put down.”
—COLLECTIONS MAGAZINE, London, on the Basic Art title Vasarely
BASIC ART
Softcover, flaps, format: 18.5 x 23 cm
(7.3 x 9.1 in.), 96 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
| â4 | "108ßk ¶00 l0f 8ll0Nl߶ 08 l0 #0f00880 8000 N0ß00fl0l 9l9l0 8ß0 lßl0fM8ll90 Mlßl ¶8l·
BASIC ART GENRES—NEW TITLES
8l¶ l0088, 8M8ll 000k8, ll߶ #fl008.
BASIC ART—GENRES
Ed. Uta Grosenick / Softcover, flaps,
format: 18.5 x 23 cm (7.3 x 9.1 in.), 96 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
VIDEO ART
Ideas in motion
Sylvia Martin
The immediacy and accessibility of video makes it an
ideal medium for artists who want to work with sound
and moving image; as soon as video cameras were avail-
able to the public in the 1970s, artists were already
beginning to experiment with the possibilities of video.
Though it took decades for it to be widely embraced by
mainstream art, video is now firmly accepted as an
important medium, thanks to the work of artists such as
Valie Export, Bruce Nauman, Bill Viola, and Gillian
Wearing.
Artists featured: Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Candice Breitz, Stan
Douglas, Douglas Gordon, Gary Hill, Nan Hoover, Pierre
Huyghe, Paul McCarthy, Aernout Mik, Bruce Nauman,
Marcel Odenbach, Tony Oursler, Nam June Paik, Pipilotti
Rist, Steina and Woody Vasulka, Bill Viola
NEW MEDIA ART
Art in the age of digital communication
Mark Tribe / Reena Jana
Artists have always been early adopters of emerging
media technologies, from Albrecht Dürer and his use of
the printing press in the 16th century to Nam June Paik’s
experiments with video in the 1960s. This book addresses
New Media art as a specific art historical movement,
focusing not only on technologies and forms but also on
thematic content and conceptual strategies. New Media
art often involves appropriation, collaboration, and the
free sharing of ideas and expressions, and frequently
addresses the political ramifications of technology
around issues of identity, commercialization, privacy, and
the public domain. Many New Media artists are pro-
foundly aware of their art historical antecedents, making
reference to Dada, Pop Art, Conceptual art, Performance
art, and Fluxus.
Artists featured: Cory Arcangel, Jonah Brucker-Cohen
and Katherine Moriwaki, Vuk Cosic, Mary Flanagan, Ken
Goldberg, Paul Kaiser and Shelly Eshkar, Jennifer and
Kevin McCoy, Mouchette, MTAA, Mendi and Keith
Obadike, RSG, Raqs Media Collective, ®™ark, and John
F. Simon, Jr., Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries
The editor: Uta Grosenick has worked at the Deich-
torhallen in Hamburg and the Bundeskunsthalle in
Bonn, and was curator at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg.
Since 1996, she has been working as a freelance editor
and organizer of exhibitions. Her publications include
TASCHEN’s Art at the Turn of the Millennium, Art Now,
and Women Artists.
“Accessible and well-balanced
language partners stunning
artwork to explore, explain
and showcase.”
—THE GOOD BOOK GUIDE, London, on Pop Art
l0fl08 8l 8000 8ß 8ll0f080l0 #fl00. f00 60f$ 800k.¨—Ruaidhri Ryan, United Kingdom, on taschen.com
BASIC ART GENRES—ALL TITLES
Ed. Uta Grosenick / Softcover, flaps,
format: 18.5 x 23 cm (7.3 x 9.1 in.), 96 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
REALISM
Kerstin Stremmel
SURREALISM
Cathrin Klingsöhr-Leroy
POP ART
Klaus Honnef
MINIMAL ART
Daniel Marzona
DADAISM
Dietmar Elger
CUBISM
Anne Ganteführer-Trier
CONCEPTUAL ART
Daniel Marzona
EXPRESSIONISM
Norbert Wolf
FANTASTIC ART
Walter Schurian
FUTURISM
Sylvia Martin
NEW MEDIA ART
Mark Tribe/Reena Jana
VIDEO ART
Sylvia Martin
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
Barbara Hess
“A huge pictorial punch
in tiny packages.”
—NEW YORK MAGAZINE, on the Basic Art series
ICONS—New Titles
Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
| âë | "10080 ¶0f¶0008 lllll0 000k8 0ll0f #8¶0 8ll0f #8¶0 0l 00l00f·fl00 800ß08 lf0M #fl98l0 000808, #00ll0
ICONS—New Titles
"...¶f08l #l0l0f08 0l 8lM#l0
lßl0fl0f8, 0l08ß llß08 8ß0 8#l88008
0l 00l00f.¨
—THE TIMES, London, on Greece Style
BAMBOO STYLE
The many uses of beautiful bamboo
Edited by Angelika Taschen / Photos by Reto Guntli
Besides feeding pandas and making a yummy addition to
many Asian dishes, bamboo is also used as a building
material, both functional and decorative, throughout coun-
tries such as China, Japan, and Indonesia. The dried stems
are extremely sturdy and lend themselves to a multitude
of uses. Some houses show off bamboo in more straight-
forward ways, lining the ceilings or floors with stems, or
even forming walls. Bamboo is also used to construct fur-
niture, lending a chair or a bed a warm, earthy feeling.
CHINA STYLE
Calling all Sinophiles
Edited by Angelika Taschen / Photos by Reto Guntli
A traditional Chinese temple mingles with a minimalist
Shigeru Ban villa, a Shanghai hotel that holds the world
record for the tallest hotel, and a luxurious Beijing club
in this compact tour of China’s most exceptional inte-
riors. Proposing a refreshing blend of antiquity and
modernity, these images exude feelings of simplicity,
Zen, and wellbeing.
NEW YORK STYLE
Among the skyscrapers: New York’s most fabulous
dwellings
Edited by Angelika Taschen
Beginning with archive images of the Big Apple over the
past century and blooming with gorgeous photos of the
city’s most beautiful and unique interiors, this book
explores the real New York inside and out. From high-rise
luxury condos with stunning views to industrial lofts, art
collectors’ pads, and eccentric, funky apartments, the inte-
riors featured here—in colorful full-page photos—are as
amazing and diverse as New Yorkers themselves.
8#8008, 00l0l8 8ß0 #8l8008 l08l 8f0 000ß0 l0 ¶0l ¶00f 0f08ll90 (0l008 ll0Nl߶." —PROFESSIONAL SPA, London, on the Style series
“These
books
are beautiful objects,
well-designed
and lucid.”
—LE MONDE, Paris, on the
ICONS series
SOUTH AFRICAN STYLE
A country of contrasts
Edited by Angelika Taschen / Photos by Deidi von
Schaewen
This surprising and multi-hued collection of interiors
ranges from Dutch colonial to traditional wood and
thatched-roof houses, townships, modern city apart-
ments, and funky artists’ homes, reflecting the country’s
tumultuous political history while celebrating its rich
culture.
DESIGN HANDBOOK. CONCEPTS, MATERIALS,
STYLES
Knowledge is power: A to Z design definitions
Charlotte &Peter Fiell
At last: a highly affordable, user-friendly handbook on
design that covers all the major concepts, materials, and
styles over the last 150 years with concise, easy-to-under-
stand definitions. And as you’d expect from TASCHEN,
it’s packed cover to cover with outstanding images too.
An absolutely indispensable book for all design fans!
FASHION NOW
Fashion designers in the spotlight
Edited by Terry Jones and Susie Rushton
Compiled by the style-savvy staff of the seminal monthly
i-D, Fashion Now highlights the work of over 90 design-
ers around the globe, focusing on not only the biggest
names but also the most exciting new talent. A to Z
designer entries include exclusive interviews, biographical
information, photos of recent designs by today’s leading
photographers, and current catwalk shots.
| â8 | "ßß 0K00ll0ßl 800f00 0l lß8#lf8ll0ß N00ß 008l¶ßl߶ 8 N008ll0.
70s CARS
Cars in the Age of Aquarius
Tony Thacker / Edited by Jim Heimann
During a decade of tumultuous change that gave us disco
and optional 8-track tape decks, the 70s would also witness
the demise of muscle cars and the birth of the economy
car. And with an influx of imports from Europe and Japan
there was more choice than ever. 70s Cars has them all—
from luxury models like the Cadillac Eldorado convert-
able, Chysler Cordoba (with rich Corinthian leather!), and
a “smaller” Lincoln Versailles, to fuel-conscious subcom-
pacts like the Pinto, Vega, “Le Car,” and the Datsun 210.
M. C. ESCHER
Labyrinths of the imagination
Edited by Marc Veldhuysen
Imaginary worlds, impossible stairways, paradoxical hall-
ways, enigmatic patterns, and mind-boggling graphics are
the trademarks of M.C. Escher’s artwork. His two-dimen-
sional drawings bring to life a fourth dimension where
the surfaces of things come together like a Mobius strip.
The profoundly original work of Escher has inspired
countless artists, designers, and filmmakers and can be
considered a genre in itself. This guide provides a mind-
bending introduction to the great master’s work.
SIGNS
Stop! No parking! Men at work! Animals crossing!
Colors
This book features an amusing collection of signs from
around the world. Divided into chapters by type (animals,
men, stop, danger, transport, children, toilets, work, “no!”,
etc.), the signs demonstrate how different cultures portray
the icons with which we are all so familiar. The diverse
selection of photographs is accompanied by texts describ-
ing the cultural and social significance of signs. You may
even learn things from this book that could save your life
the next time you travel!
ICONS—New Titles
".8 l88l·l000, 0l¶0·0ß0f¶¶ llK
0ß l00 l0#l0 8l 08ß0.¨
—THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, New York, on the Icons series
ICONS—New Titles
Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
08ßß0l N8ll l0f l00 ß0Kl 00lll0ß...¨—John Mills, Australia, on taschen.com
WEB DESIGN: E-COMMERCE
The world’s coolest online shopping sites
In this latest addition to the Web Design series, we explore
the very best of electronic commerce website design. Now
that people are using online shops to buy everything from
computers to groceries to clothing, e-commerce has become
a major player in the sales market—to such a degree that
recent research has estimated that about 10% of US “brick
and mortar” sales are even influenced by online shops. From
small retailers to online superstores, this guide brings you
the most cutting edge e-commerce sites on the web today.
WEB DESIGN: FLASH SITES
The power of Flash
Many of the web’s most eye-popping sites are created using
Flash, a program which allows for total creative freedom
and maximum interactivity. In its early years, Flash was
used mostly for artistic and design sites, but more recently
large corporations have turned to Flash. This guide rounds
up the very best and most innovative sites using 100%
Flash navigation, including Nike, Adidas, Shrek, Nintendo,
Playstation, Ford, and Honda. Also featured are two case
studies and an introduction by Rob Ford, the creator of
Favorite Website Awards.
ICONS—New Titles
"lK00ll0ßl 008l¶ß @08lll¶...
ß 800f00 0l lß8#lf8ll0ß.¨
—INSIDE FR, Brussels, on Web Design: Best Studios
“...the sexiest
graphic book publisher
in existence.”
—ADVERTISING AGE, New York
ICONS—Web Design / New Titles
Ed. Julius Wiedemann / Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
| ë0 | "Nll 0000ß ß0ß8¶0ß 0ß0 kl0lß0ß Ff0l80ß M800l0 1ß$08l8 808 k0ß8l00000fß N8880ßN8f0 0ß0 08l 00ß
“...finally a book that brings
a breath of fresh air to the lifeless
literature on bauhaus.”
—DOMUS, Milan, on bauhaus
“TASCHEN books
are beautiful, original and
unpredictable.”
—THE OBSERVER LIFE MAGAZINE, London
ONLY
39.99
$ 1Z.99 l £ ë.99
f 1.900 lß08
Hardcover, format:
24 x 30 cm (9.4 x 11.8 in.),
c. 200 pp. each
DALÍ
Robert Descharnes / Gilles Néret
KLIMT
Gottfried Fliedl
BAUHAUS
Magdalena Droste,
Bauhaus Archiv
HOPPER
Ivo Kranzfelder
8000M8fkl ¶f0ß0ll00 80l¶0Ml800l . Nlf0 N0ll0f Mll 8#0kl8k0l8f0ß Ff0(0kl0ß 000ff88000ß.¨—WESTART, Cologne
“A pleasurable introduction
to Matisse’s work, while its wealth
of illustrations will make it a
worthy reference book to add to the
more serious library.”
—THE ART BOOK, London, on Matisse
MATISSE
Gilles Néret
MONET
Karin Sagner
SYMBOLISM
Michael Gibson / Ed. Gilles Néret
PICASSO
Carsten-Peter Warncke / Ed. Ingo F. Walther
“A book that takes
the reader on a journey through
an imaginary museum.”
—LA LIBRE BELGIQUE, Brussels, on Symbolism
| ëZ | " 1ß$08l8, l8 0888 00llfl00 000 #000ll08 f8lßß8ll88lMl ll0fl 0`8fl0 0 lll08l¶l0.¨—L’ESPRESSO, Rome
ARCHITECTURAL
THEORY
Bernd Evers /
Ed. Christof Thoenes
“This compendium captures
the incredibly rich artistic tradition of
alchemy, from medieval woodcuts
to the illustrations of William Blake.”
—SEATTLE WEEKLY, Seattle, on Alchemy & Mysticism
ALCHEMY & MYSTICISM
Alexander Roob
“The book succeeds
both as serious reference tool
and endlessly enjoyable
browsing material.”
—THE REGISTER-GUARD, USA,
on Decorative Art 70s
“This fully illustrated reference
manual will prove to be an indispensable
tool for collectors: names are named,
designs praised and accusations made.”
—SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER MAGAZINE, San Francisco,
on Decorative Art 60s
DECORATIVE ART 60s
Eds. Charlotte & Peter Fiell
DECORATIVE ART 70s
Eds. Charlotte & Peter Fiell
ONLY
39.99
$ 1Z.99 l £ ë.99
f 1.900 lß08
Softcover, flaps, format:
14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.),
c. 570 pp. each
"1ß$08l8, Zâ 8ß08 00 00M ¶08l0I¨—MEIO&MENSAGEM, SÃO PAULO, on the 25 Anniversary Editions
ENCYCLOPAEDIA
ANATOMICA
Museo La Specola, Florence /
Marta Poggesi / Monika von Düring
40 ARCHITECTS AROUND 40
Jessica Cargill Thompson
“An excellent and
accurate book, altogether
very beautiful.”
—PIXEL, Paris, on
Encyclopaedia Anatomica
IMPRESSIONISM
Ed. Ingo F. Walther
VAN GOGH –
THE COMPLETE PAINTINGS
Ingo F. Walther / Rainer Metzger
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN A–Z
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
“This is an excellent study,
well-presented and with beautiful
photography.”
—ANTIQUE DEALER NEWSPAPER, London, on Industrial Design A-Z
THE
COMPLETE
PAINTINGS
“This is the
definitive guide to
the Impressionist
movement.”
—THE GOOD BOOK
GUIDE, London, on
Impressionism
| ë4 | "f l0 M0(0f, #8f8 00l00f8f 808 00088 00 #l8l8 900l90 00ß 808 lll0l08 M88
“It’s a candy box
of colour, cool shapes
and mighty manga.”
—KULTUREFLASH.COM, London, on
Japanese Graphics Now!
“... its handsome,
often sexy, pictures
provoking dark,
wistful longings for
cinema that
recently was but
no longer is.”
—LOS ANGELES TIMES
BOOK REVIEW, Los Angeles, on Movies of the 70s
JAPANESE GRAPHICS NOW!
Eds. Gisela Kozak, Julius Wiedemann
THE GOLDEN AGE OF
ADVERTISING—THE 70s
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann
BEST MOVIES OF THE 70s
Jürgen Müller
“An artistic
homage to a
genius.”
—FRANKFURTER RUNDSCHAU,
Frankfurt a. M., on Piranesi
PIRANESI – THE ETCHINGS
Luigi Ficacci
ROBOTS—SPACESHIPS & OTHER TIN TOYS
Teruhisa Kitahara / Minoru Shimizu
ONLY
39.99
$ 1Z.99 l £ ë.99
f 1.900 lß08
Hardcover, format:
16.7 x 21.7 cm (6.6 x 8.5 in.),
352 pp.
0M0l0M8ll008 00ß 008000ßl0 00l 407.¨ —CASA VIVA, Bogotá, on the 25 Anniversary Editions
“This edition
provides a wonderful
selection of
the kitschy and
the bizarre.”
—CREATIVE REVIEW, London, on All-American
Ads of the 70s
AUGUSTE RACINET.
THE COMPLETE COSTUME HISTORY
Françoise Tétart-Vittu / Hardcover in a slipcase,
format: 25.2 x 38.2 cm (9.9 x 15 in.), 544 pp.
€ 49.99 / $ 59.99 / £ 34.99 / ¥ 8.900
“C’est un monument que
publient les éditions TASCHEN.”
—ART PRESS, Paris, on Racinet
“Text and illustrations form
a remarkable whole, on a theme which
has never been subjected to
such a precise synthetic study.”
—BEAUX ARTS MAGAZINE, Paris, on Sculpture
SCULPTURE. FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE PRESENT DAY
Georges Duby / Jean-Luc Daval / Softcover, 2 volumes in a slipcase,
19.6 x 26.8 cm (7.7 x 10.6 in.), 1,152 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
ONLY
349.99
$ â9.99 l £ J4.99
f 8.900
ONLY
319.99
$ Z4.99 l £ 14.99
f J.900
2 volumes
1,152 pages
in a
slipcase
| ëë | "l8l0 ll0f0 f00ß0 l0Kl08 00ß0l808 ¶ 0ß8 98ll088 lßl0fM80l0ß 00M#l0M0ßl8fl8 0l8f8 ¶ 00M#l0l8
RENZO PIANO BUILDING WORKSHOP
WORKS 1966–2005
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover, XXL-format:
30.8 x 39 cm (12.1 x 15.3 in.), 528 pp.
€ 99.99 / $ 125 / £ 69.99 / ¥ 15.000
ARCHITECTURE NOW! VOL. 3
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 576 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ARCHITECTURE NOW! VOL. 4
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 576 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
New!
THE GRAND TOUR. TRAVELLING THE
WORLD WITH AN ARCHITECT’S EYE
Photos and text: Harry Seidler / Ed. Peter Gössel /
Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.),
704 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 29.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
GREEN ARCHITECTURE
James Wines / Ed. Philip Jodidio / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.6 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 240 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer / Ed. Peter Gössel /
Flexi-cover, format: 18.4 x 24.5 cm (7.2 x 9.6 in.),
192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
ÁLVARO SIZA
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Flexi-cover, format:
18.4 x 24.5 cm (7.2 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
XXL
Format
ßf00ll00l0f0
PETER GÖSSEL / [email protected]
PHILIP JODIDIO / [email protected]
ARCHITECTURE IN
THE NETHERLANDS
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover,
format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm (9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
ARCHITECTURE
IN JAPAN
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover,
format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm (9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
ARCHITECTURE IN
THE UNITED KINGDOM
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover,
format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm (9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
ARCHITECTURE
IN SWITZERLAND
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Hardcover,
format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm (9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
New! New! New! New!
ARCHITECTURE NOW!
Ed. Philip Jodidio / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
THE GRAND TOUR. TRAVELLING THE
WORLD WITH AN ARCHITECT’S EYE
Photos and text: Harry Seidler / Ed. Peter Gössel /
Icons, Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
00ßll¶0f8ß00 0ß8 8¶f8080l0 ¶ 00M#80l8 90ßl8ß8 8 08l0 #0f80ß8(0.¨—LA SEMANA DE LIBROS, Bogotá, on Loos
ßf00ll00l0f0
PETER GÖSSEL / [email protected]
ANTONI GAUDÍ
Maria Antonietta Crippa
LE CORBUSIER
Jean-Louis Cohen
ALVAR AALTO
Louna Lahti
BAUHAUS
Magdalena Droste
New!
CASE STUDY HOUSES
Elizabeth A.T. Smith
EAMES
Gloria Koenig
WALTER GROPIUS
Gilbert Lupfer, Paul Sigel
JOHN LAUTNER
Barbara-Ann Campbell-Lange
ADOLF LOOS
August Sarnitz
RICHARD NEUTRA
Barbara Lamprecht
EERO SAARINEN
Pierluigi Serraino
HANS SCHAROUN
Eberhard Syring, Jörg Kirschenmann
RUDOLF SCHINDLER
James Steele
KARL FRIEDRICH SCHINKEL
Martin Steffens
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer
OTTO WAGNER
August Sarnitz
Basic Architecture features:
• Each title contains approximately 120 images, includ-
ing photographs, sketches, drawings, and floor plans
• Introductory essays explore the architect’s life and
work, touching on family and background as well as
collaborations with other architects
• The body presents the most important works in
chronological order, with descriptions of client and/or
architect wishes, construction problems (why some
projects were never executed), and resolutions
• The appendix includes a list of complete or selected
works, biography, bibliography and a map indicating
the locations of the architect’s most famous buildings
The editor: Peter Gössel runs a practice for the design
of museums and exhibitions. He is the editor of
TASCHEN’s monographs on Julius Shulman, R. M.
Schindler, John Lautner and Richard Neutra, as well as
the editor of the Basic Architecture series.
Basic Architecture Series—All Titles
Ed. Peter Gössel / Softcover, flaps, format: 18.5 x 23 cm
(7.3 x 9.1 in.), 96 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
New!
LOUIS ISIDORE KAHN
Joseph Rosa
MIES VAN DER ROHE
Claire Zimmermann
New!
“Le livre, illustré de superbes
photographies, présente ses plus belles
réalisations et de nombreux plans et croquis.
Une découverte surprenante.”
—REVISTA, Biarritz, on Lautner
| ë8 | "1ß$08l8 800k8, 8 Nl80 00M#8߶ l08l f000¶ßlI08 l00 llß0 llß0
ßfl
ART NOW. VOL. 2
Ed. Uta Grosenick / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 604 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
DALÍ. THE PAINTINGS
Robert Descharnes, Gilles Néret / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.8 cm (7.7 x 10.1 in.),
780 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
PICASSO
Carsten-Peter Warncke, Ingo F. Walther /
Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 25.8 cm (7.7 x 10.1 in.),
740 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE CURSE OF LONO
Hunter S. Thompson, Ralph Steadman /
Hardcover, format: 28 x 37.4 cm (11 x 14.7 in.),
208 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
COLLECTING CONTEMPORARY
Adam Lindemann / Notebook-binding, format:
17 x 22.7 cm (6.7 x 8.9 in.), 296 pp.
€ 24.99 / $ 29.99 / £ 16.99 / ¥ 4.900
New!
LEONARDO DA VINCI
THE COMPLETE PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
Frank Zöllner, Johannes Nathan / Hardcover,
XXL-format: 29 x 44 cm (11.4 x 17.3 in.), 696 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
“Opening this lavishly illustrated book
is a sumptuous celebration of the visual
aspects of Leonardo’s œuvre.”
—THE ART NEWSPAPER, London
“Perhaps one day fine books, like museums,
will be equipped with light beams and alarm systems.
The curiosity of anyone getting too close to a page
in their desire to examine a detail would then be
rewarded in the same unpleasant way as in the
Louvre. TASCHEN’s books are gradually acquiring
the character of precious objects worthy of protection,
though their purpose is quite different.”
—FRANKFURTER RUNDSCHAU, Frankfurt am Main
Hunter S. Thompson, Playboy Beauty
Shauna Sands and Hugh Hefner
at the book signing at TASCHEN Store
Los Angeles, 2004
XXL
Format
PETRA LAMERS-SCHÜTZE / [email protected]
INGO F. WALTHER / [email protected]
“…the definitive introduction
to the scope and range of Picasso’s
work.” —THE TIMES, London, on Picasso
00lN00ß lf00 8fl 8ß0 #0l# lf0880f0.¨—FEMME FATALE, Los Angeles
PETRA LAMERS-SCHÜTZE / [email protected]
INGO F. WALTHER / [email protected]
ßfl
MIRÓ
Walter Erben / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 240 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
POP ART
Tilman Osterwold / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 240 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
SCHIELE
Wolfgang Georg Fischer / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 200 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
VAN GOGH
Rainer Metzger, Ingo F. Walther / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 256 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
MAGRITTE
Jacques Meuris / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 216 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
CÉZANNE
Hajo Düchting / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 224 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
CHAGALL
Jacob Baal-Teshuva / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 280 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
EXPRESSIONISM
Dietmar Elger / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 256 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
HUNDERTWASSER
Harry Rand / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 200 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
JAPANESE PRINTS
Gabriele Fahr-Becker / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 208 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
KANDINSKY
Ulrike Becks-Malorny / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 200 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
M. C. ESCHER
Ed. Marc Veldhuysen / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
HR GIGER
Icons, Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
WOMEN ARTISTS
Ed. Uta Grosenick / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
New!
| ¡0 | "F8fl 0l 8 80fl08 0l 800fl M0ß0¶f8#08, l0l8 ll90l¶ 8ß0 N0ll·lßl0fM00 N0fk ¶l908 08
100 M08l 8000088l0l 8fl 000k
80fl08 lß l00 N0fl0
Nearly 100 titles available in over 20 languages!
ßfl¬888l0 ßfl
PETRA LAMERS-SCHÜTZE / [email protected]
8 0l08f 9l8l0ß 0l ll 6f000`8 8l¶ll8ll0 lßß098ll0ß8.¨—LE MONDE DE LA BIBLE, Paris, on El Greco
BASIC ART SERIES—ALL TITLES
Softcover, flaps, format: 18.5 x 23 cm (7.3 x 9.1 in.), 96 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
PETRA LAMERS-SCHÜTZE / [email protected]
ßfl¬888l0 ßfl
| ¡Z | "l8IIlll0 0¶ Nllll8M 0l8Kl0ß l8 8 M888l90 8ß0 lMM00l8l0l¶ 8l0ßßl߶
In 1959 and 1960, photographer William Claxton and
noted German musicologist Joachim Berendt traveled the
United States hot on the trail of jazz music. The result
of their collaboration was an amazing collection of pho-
tographs and recordings of legendary artists as well as
unknown street musicians.
The book Jazzlife, the original fruit of their labors, has
become a collector’s item that is highly treasured among
jazz and photography fans. In 2003, TASCHEN began
reassembling this important collection of material—
along with many never-before-seen color images from
those trips. They are brought together in this updated
volume, which includes a foreword by Claxton tracing
his travels with Berendt and his love affair with jazz
music in general. Utilizing the benefits of today’s digital
technology, a restored audio CD from Joachim Berendt’s
original recordings has been produced and is included in
this package. Jazz fans will be delighted to be able to take
a jazz-trip through time, both seeing and hearing the
music as Claxton and Berendt originally experienced it.
• Featuring photographs of Charlie Parker, Count Basie,
Duke Ellington, Muddy Waters, Gabor Szabo, Dave
Brubeck, Stan Getz, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald,
Miles Davis, Charlie Mingus, Thelonious Monk, John
Coltrane, and many more
The photographer: William Claxton holds a special place
in the history of American—particularly jazz—photo-
graphy. Since his early career—shooting for LIFE, Paris
Match, and Vogue, among other magazines - Claxton has
worked with and become friends with many Hollywood
luminaries and jazz musicians, most notably Steve
McQueen and Chet Baker (whom Claxton first photo-
graphed in 1952 when Baker was young and still un-
known). Claxton, whose jazz imagery has graced the cov-
ers of countless albums and magazine covers for over five
decades, is considered the preeminent photographer of jazz
music. TASCHEN has also published Claxton’s Jazz seen
and Steve McQueen.
The author: Joachim E. Berendt was a founding mem-
ber of South West German Radio (Südwestfunk) and
produced more than 250 records, including many issued
on the MPS-SABA label. In 1953, he first published The
Jazzbuch, which became the most successful history book
on jazz worldwide. His collection of records, books and
jazz documents became the basis for the Jazzinstitut
Darmstadt before he died in an accident in 2000.
WILLIAM CLAXTON. JAZZLIFE
Text: Joachim E. Berendt / Introduction: William Claxton /
Hardcover in a cloth-covered box, 4 ultrachrome prints, CD,
XXL-format: 29.1 x 40.7 cm (11.5 x 16 in.), 696 pp.
€ 1,000 / $ 1,250 / £ 700 / ¥ 150.000
• Limited to 1,000 individually signed
and numbered copies
• Every copy comes with four
signed and numbered,
50 x 60 cm (19.6 x 23.6 in.)
ultrachrome prints
• Book and prints packaged in a cloth-
covered box
Print 1: The Metropole Café on Broadway
near Times Square, New York City
Print 4: Ray Charles
with a Raylette, New York City
Print 2: Stan Getz by a stage
door on Cosmo Alley, Hollywood
Print 3: The George Williams Brass Band,
New Orleans
William Claxton signing
his book at Dutton’s, Beverly Hill,
in December 2005.
“This book is a visual feast
and includes some of the most striking
and expressive jazz photography
ever seen...” —JAZZWISE MAGAZINE, London
“The most complete and important
document of the jazz scene from that era
…Jazzlife is a gift that any jazz fan
will enjoy for years to come.”
—EUROPEAN BUSINESS MAGAZINE, London
Plus CD
WITH DIGITALLY
REMASTERED
RECORDINGS
MADE DURING
BERENDT’S
AND CLAXTON’S
JOURNEY
ßfll8l8` l0lll0ß8
XXL
Format
ßfll8l8` l0lll0ß8
llll0 . 8ß 090fN00lMl߶ 8ß0 800llM0 90l0M0.¨—NEW YORK POST, New York
“…the biggest, heaviest,
most radiant thing ever printed
– Ali’s last victory.”
—DER SPIEGEL, Hamburg
ßfll8l8` l0lll0ß8
The Champ’s Edition: No. 1 – 1,000
• The “Champ’s Edition” has a white silk cover with
pink lettering.
• Limited to 1,000 individually numbered copies,
each one signed by Muhammad Ali and Jeff Koons.
• Four gallery-quality silver gelatine prints signed by
photographer Howard L. Bingham and Muhammad
Ali.
• Every “Champ’s Edition” comes with the sculpture
“Radial Champs” by Jeff Koons in the size 175 x 170 cm
(69 x 67 in.), comprising two inflatables and a stool.
www.taschen-goat.com
The Collector’s Edition: No. 1,001 – 10,000
• The “Collector’s Edition” shows Ali’s torso with
pink lettering.
• Limited to 9,000 individually numbered copies,
each one signed by Muhammad Ali and Jeff Koons.
• Every “Collector’s Edition” comes with the
photo-litho “Radial Champs” by Jeff Koons in the
size 50 x 40 cm (20 x 16 in.).
GOAT. A TRIBUTE TO MUHAMMAD ALI
Hardcover in a box, XXL-format: 50 x 50 cm
(19.7 x 19.7 in.), 792 pp.
CHAMP’S EDITION
€ 10,000 / $ 12,500 / £ 6,750 / ¥ 1.300.000
COLLECTOR’S EDITION
€ 3,000 / $ 4,000 / £ 2,000 / ¥ 390.000
XXL
Format
Below: The GOAT team, including Muhammad
Ali and his wife Lonnie, Howard L. Bingham
and Neil Leifer, Angelo Dundee, Hank Kaplan,
Leon Gast, at the world’s largest book fair, at
Frankfurt in October 2003.
| ¡4 | "1ß$08l8 000k8 8f0 8lN8¶8 8l0ßßl߶ 00(00l8 0l 8fl 008l 0l8#l8¶00 lß
ARAKI
Interview by Jérôme Sans / Limited edition of 2,500 copies
worldwide, signed and numbered by Araki / Hardcover in
a box, XXL-format: 34.5 x 50 cm (13.4 x 19.7 in.), 636 pp.
€ 2,000 / $ 2,500 / £ 1,350 / ¥ 270.000
AFRICA. LENI RIEFENSTAHL
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Interview by Kevin Brownlow /
Limited edition of 2,500 copies worldwide, signed and
numbered by Leni Riefenstahl / Hardcover in a box,
XXL-format: 34.5 x 50 cm (13.4 x 19.7 in.), 564 pp.
€ 2,000 / $ 2,500 / £ 1,350 / ¥ 270.000
ßfll8l8` l0lll0ß8
CHRISTO AND JEANNE-CLAUDE
THE GATES, CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK CITY, 1979–2005
The Collector’s Edition is limited to 5,000 copies, signed and
numbered by the artists, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, as well as their
exclusive photographer Wolfgang Volz. Each copy comes with a
24 x 24 cm (9.4 x 9.4 in.) piece of the fabric used for the work of art
Hardcover in a slipcase, format: 27 x 29 cm (10.6 x 11.4 in.), 968 pp.,
2,445 illustrations
€ 350 / $ 400 / £ 250 / ¥ 50.000
LEROY GRANNIS.
SURF PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE 1960s AND 1970s
Collector’s edition limited to 1,000 copies, numbered and signed
by LeRoy Grannis / Ed. Jim Heimann / Steve Barilotti / Hardcover
in a slipcase, XXL-format: 39.6 x 33 cm (15.6 x 13 in.), 278 pp.
€ 350 / $ 400 / £ 250 / ¥ 50.000
New!
XXL
Format
XXL
Format
XXL
Format
S
O
L
D
O
U
T
l00 Ml00l0 0l 8 00ll00 l80l0 0f 8 N8lll߶ f00M l80l0.¨—Professional Beauty Magazine, Sydney
TERRY RICHARDSON. TERRYWORLD
Ed. Dian Hanson / Limited to 1,000 signed and numbered
books, each packaged in a clear acrylic box with a Terrybear
(a brown teddy bear with Terry’s face) and one of four
signed and numbered photographic prints (25.5 x 33 cm/
10 x 13 in.) in limited editions of 250 each /
Hardcover, format: 26 x 34 cm (10.2 x 13.4 in.), 288 pp.
€ 500 / $ 500 / £ 350 / ¥ 75.000
“Terryworld is a pastiche
of sexuality at its most
raw and licentiousness
at its finest. It’s a brilliant
and clever masterpiece.”
—CITY MAGAZINE, New York
ßfll8l8` l0lll0ß8
David LaChapelle signing each book
page at his Los Angeles studio while
TASCHEN editor Ethel Seno assists him
Amanda Lepore and Benedikt Taschen at the
David LaChapelle book launch in Miami, December
2005. © Photo: Jennifer Kellen, Los Angeles
LACHAPELLE, ARTISTS AND PROSTITUTES
Limited edition of 2,500 copies worldwide, signed
and numbered by David LaChapelle / Hardcover in
a cloth-covered presentation box, XXL-format: 34.5 x 50 cm
(13.6 x 19.7 in.), 698 pp.
€ 1,500 / $ 1,750 / £ 1,200 / ¥ 230.000
XXL
Format
S
O
L
D
O
U
T
| ¡ë |
"1ß$08l8`8 f0#f0000ll0ß l8 00l8l8ß0l߶, Nll0 0fl8# f0#f0000ll0ß8 8ß0 0l0¶8ßl,
0l888l08
PETRA LAMERS-SCHÜTZE
[email protected]
PIERRE-FRANÇOIS HUGUES D’HANCARVILLE.
THE COMPLETE COLLECTION OF ANTIQUITIES
FROM THE CABINET OF SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON
Sebastian Schütze, Madeleine Gisler-Huwiller / Hardcover,
7 fold-outs, XXL-format: 29 x 44 cm (11.4 x 17.3 in.), 550 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
JOAN BLAEU
ATLAS MAIOR OF 1665
Peter van der Krogt / Österreichische Nationalbibliothek,
Vienna / Hardcover, 2 fold-outs, 4 folded posters,
XXL-format: 29 x 44 cm (11.4 x 17.3 in.), 594 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
JEAN BAPTISTE MARC BOURGERY
ATLAS OF HUMAN ANATOMY AND SURGERY
Jean-Marie Le Minor / Henri Sick / Hardcover, 6 fold-outs,
XXL-format: 29 x 40.5 cm (11.4 x 15.7 in.), 714 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
“There can be few books out
there more jaw-droppingly gorgeous
than this extraordinary Atlas.
The reprint does more than justice
to Blaeu’s masterpiece.”
—TNT MAGAZINE, London
All titles
XXL
Format
ALCHEMY & MYSTICISM
THE HERMETIC CABINET
Alexander Roob / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
THE BOOK OF FRUITS. THE COMPLETE
POMONA BRITANNICA
George Brookshaw / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
ALBERTUS SEBA. BUTTERFLIES
Irmgard Müsch / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 128 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
ALBERTUS SEBA. SHELLS & CORALS
Irmgard Müsch / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 128 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
THE AMERICAN INDIAN
Karl Bodmer / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
NATIVE AMERICANS
Edward S. Curtis / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
ENCYCLOPAEDIA ANATOMICA
Museo La Specola Florence / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
l0l0·00l #l8l08. 10l8 l8 8 000k 0l ¶f08l 0080l¶.¨
—ROYAL ACADEMY MAGAZINE, London, on Atlas Maior
0l888l08
PETRA LAMERS-SCHÜTZE
[email protected]
AUGUSTE RACINET.
THE COMPLETE COSTUME HISTORY
Françoise Tétart-Vittu / Hardcover, XXL-format: 29 x 44 cm
(11.4 x 17.3 in.), 636 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
“A magnificent book, it will become
invaluable for anyone interested
in the ancient world, the man himself,
and the 18th century.”
—SUNDAY TIMES CULTURE, London, on The Complete Collection of Antiquities
A. RACINET & M. DUPONT-AUBERVILLE
THE WORLD OF ORNAMENT
Introduction: David Batterham / Hardcover + DVD,
XXL-format: 29 x 44 cm: (11.4 x 17.3 in.), 528 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
New!
PLUS DVD
5000
ROYALTY-FREE
HIGH-RESOLUTION
IMAGES
| ¡8 | "ß lf08l l0f 8߶0ß0 N00 8lM#l¶ llk08 ¶f8#0l0 8fl. $lßk lßl0 ¶00f l8900fll0 8fM·
008l¶ß
CHARLOTTE & PETER FIELL / [email protected]
JULIUS WIEDEMANN / [email protected]
SIXTIES DESIGN
Philippe Garner / Flexi-cover, format:
18.4 x 24.5 cm (7.2 x 9.6 in.), 176 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
JAPANESE GARDENS
Günter Nitschke / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 240 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
1000 LIGHTS
VOL. 1: 1878 TO 1959
Ed. Charlotte &Peter Fiell / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 26.7 cm (7.7 x 10.5 in.), 576 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
1000 LIGHTS
VOL. 2: 1960 TO PRESENT
Ed. Charlotte &Peter Fiell / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 26.7 cm (7.7 x 10.5 in.), 576 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
1000 SIGNS
Ed. Colors Magazine / Flexi-cover, Klotz,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 512 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
FASHION NOW 2
Ed. Terry Jones, Susie Rushton / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.5 x 25 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 640 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
“TASCHEN édite deux volumes
qui nous offrent une sélection de plus
de 1000 luminaires ! Ces deux
magnifiques livres nous éclairent !”
—NEXT, Paris, on 1000 Lights
“A luscious collection of
fashion pics with exclusive
interviews from the world’s
best designers...”
—ELLE MAGAZINE, London, on Fashion Now 2
LOGO NOW!
Ed. Julius Wiedemann / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.6 x 9.8 in.), 512 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ILLUSTRATION NOW!
Ed. Julius Wiedemann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.6 x 9.8 in.), 544 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
New!
008lf 8ß0 l0l ¶00f Mlß0 N8ß00f 80f088 00ßllß0ßl8.¨—ILLUSTRATION MAGAZINE, London, on Illustration Now!
008l¶ß¬l00ß8
CHARLOTTE & PETER FIELL / [email protected]
JULIUS WIEDEMANN / [email protected]
ICONS DESIGN—ALL TITLES
Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
CHAIRS
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
FASHION FROM THE 18TH
TO THE 20TH CENTURY
The Kyoto Costume Institute
FASHION NOW
Ed. Terry Jones and Susie Rushton
GRAPHIC DESIGN FOR
THE 21ST CENTURY
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
STARCK
Ed Mae Cooper / Pierre Doze /
Elizabeth Laville
LOUIS COMFORT TIFFANY
Jacob Baal-Teshuva
WEB DESIGN: E-COMMERCE
Ed. Julius Wiedemann
WEB DESIGN: FLASH SITES
Ed. Julius Wiedemann
WEB DESIGN: PORTFOLIOS
Ed. Julius Wiedemann
WEB DESIGN: STUDIOS
Ed. Julius Wiedemann
DESIGN HANDBOOK.
CONCEPTS, MATERIALS,
STYLES
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
DESIGN OF THE
20TH CENTURY
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
DESIGN FOR THE
21ST CENTURY
Charlotte & Peter Fiell
DDR DESIGN 1949–1989
Introduction: Ralf E. Ulrich /
Photos: Ernst Hedler
“Attention! Designers and students studying
design! Here are fabulous pieces of design with
originality and uniqueness from East Germany.”
—MONO MAGAZINE, Tokyo, on DDR Design
New!
New!
| 80 | "ll`8 8 000k l08l`0 00 08f0 l0 #0l 00Nß, ll ¶00 000l0 llll ll.¨ —CHICAGO TRIBUNE, Chicago, on The Stanley Kubrick Archives
fllM
ALISON CASTLE / [email protected]
JÜRGEN MÜLLER / [email protected]
MOVIES OF THE 80s
Jürgen Müller / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 864 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
MOVIES OF THE 60s
Jürgen Müller / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 640 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
MOVIES OF THE 50s
Jürgen Müller / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 576 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
MOVIES OF THE 90s
Jürgen Müller / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 800 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE STANLEY KUBRICK ARCHIVES
Bonus: First edition books each contain a strip of twelve frames from
2001: A Space Odyssey cut from a 70 mm print owned by Stanley Kubrick
Ed. Alison Castle / Hardcover, Audio-CD featuring an interview with Stanley
Kubrick from 1966, XXL-format: 41.1 x 30 cm (16.2 x 11.8 in.), 544 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
MOVIES OF THE 40s
Jürgen Müller / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 576 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
MOVIES OF THE 70s
Jürgen Müller / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 736 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
“Here reaching its fifth
volume, and therefore now
covering practically half of
cinema’s lifespan, TASCHEN’s
assessment of cinematic
decades has cemented itself as
an enticing and dependable
reference series for film fans’
libraries.”
—EMPIRE MAGAZINE, London, on Movies of the 50s
“The Stanley
Kubrick Archives
is a stupendously
splendid tome:
a fantastic treasure
trove for
Kubrick fans.”
—NEWS/HANDELSBLATT, Frankfurt
“Ein Filmbuch also auch wie ein Kubrick Film:
Maßstabsetzend im jeweiligen Genre, monumental
und detailverliebt, äußerlich perfekt und innerlich
aufwühlend, innovativ und ironisch zugleich, letztlich
bewusstseinserweiternd.” —FILM-DIENST, Bonn
“Imposingly dense, wide as a barn
door and weighing in at a lap-crushing
15 pounds, TASCHEN’s 544-page
The Stanley Kubrick Archives showed
up one morning in our offices, where
my editor and I circled it like curious
apes.” —TIME OUT NEW YORK, New York
Stanley Kubrick’s widow, Christiane
Kubrick, with executive producer Jan Harlan
at a book signing in London
S
O
L
D
S
O
L
D
“If you’re a fan of
Sixties cinema, this stylish
and intelligent guide
is a must-have. Printed
on luxurious paper,
it details in engaging
script the most memorable
movies of that vibrant
decade.”
—THE GOOD BOOK GUIDE,
London, on Movies of the 60s
XXL
Format
"10l8 l8 0ß0 00ll 0l 8 ¶000 800lll0ß l0 8߶ M09l0 00ll`8 000k 800ll.¨ —FIESTA MAGAZINE, London, on Movies of the 40s
fllM
PAUL DUNCAN / [email protected]
LUIS BUÑUEL
Bill Krohn / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
PAUL VERHOEVEN
Douglas Keesey / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
“Each book is crammed
with stunning visuals of iconic
images and behind-
the-scenes moments.”
—EMPIRE, London, on the Film series
FEDERICO FELLINI
Chris Wiegand / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-
cover, format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.),
192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
EROTIC CINEMA
Douglas Keesey / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-
cover, format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.),
192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
JOHN FORD
Scott Eyman / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
FILM NOIR
Alain Silver, James Ursini / Ed. Paul Duncan /
Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm
(7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
STANLEY KUBRICK
Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
FRANÇOIS TRUFFAUT
Robert Ingram / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
BILLY WILDER
Glenn Hopp / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
MICHELANGELO ANTONIONI
Seymour Chatman / Ed. Paul Duncan /
Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm
(7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
ROMAN POLANSKI
F. X. Feeney / Ed. Paul Duncan / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
“Leur dernier bijou en date
est un somptueux ouvrage consacré
au réalisateur Paul Verhoeven.”
—ADDICT MAGAZINE, Montreuil, on Paul Verhoeven
| 8Z | "88ll8 88080f 0ß0 80l0l8 8l000ß 00f lß80l 8ß $000ß00ll lß ßl00l8 ß800. 0l0 8#0kl8k0l8f8l0ß
lll08l¶l0
ANGELIKA TASCHEN / [email protected]
THE HOTEL BOOK.
GREAT ESCAPES AFRICA
Shelley-Maree Cassidy / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 23.8 x 30.2 cm
(9.3 x 11.9 in.), 400 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE HOTEL BOOK.
GREAT ESCAPES EUROPE
Shelley-Maree Cassidy / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 23.8 x 30.2 cm
(9.3 x 11.9 in.), 400 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
SPA
Allison Arieff, Bryan Burkhart / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 19.6 x 24.9 cm
(7.7 x 9.8 in.), 480 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE HOTEL BOOK.
GREAT ESCAPES ASIA
Christiane Reiter / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 23.8 x 30.2 cm
(9.3 x 11.9 in.), 400 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE HOTEL BOOK.
GREAT ESCAPES SOUTH AMERICA
Photos: Tuca Reinés / Christiane Reiter /
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover, format:
23.8 x 30.2 cm (9.3 x 11.9 in.), 360 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE HOTEL BOOK.
GREAT ESCAPES NORTH AMERICA
Text: Daisann McLane / Photos: Don Freeman /
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover, format:
23.8 x 30.2 cm (9.4 x 11.9 in.), 400 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
“Tout est dit dans ces images
qui nous font visiter l’Afrique dans
sa splendeur et sa pluralité.”
—LE FIGARO, Paris, on Inside Africa
“Spa is the perfect resource.
This beautiful book features
nearly 100 dramatic
destinations for those who
like their luxury wrapped
in great design.”
—DWELL, San Francisco, on SPA
A DEDICATED WEBSITE FOR
OUR TRAVEL BOOKS HAS BEEN
SET UP TO ALLOW YOU TO BROWSE
ALL OF THE HOTEL SELECTIONS
ONLINE OR MAKE YOUR
BOOKING DIRECTLY. VISIT
WWW.GREAT-ESCAPES-HOTELS.COM
TO FIND OUT MORE.
INSIDE CUBA
Photos: Gianni Basso/Vega MG / Text: Julio César
Pérez Hernández / Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover,
format: 24 x 31.6 cm (9.4 x 12.4 in.), 416 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
S
O
L
D
O
U
T
New!
INSIDE ASIA
Photos: Reto Guntli / Ed. Angelika Taschen /
Sunil Sethi / Hardcover, 2 volumes, format: 24 x 31.6 cm
(9.4 x 12.4 in.), 880 pp.
€ 99.99 / $ 125 / £ 69.99 / ¥ 15.000
New!
0890ß 8lß0 lß 00M 8ll008ß0 ll9l߶ lß 88ll 90f88MM0ll. llß0 0#ll8000 1f80Mf0l80.¨— ELLE, Munich
AESTHETIC SURGERY
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover,
format: 21 x 29.3 cm (8.3 x 11.7 in.), 440 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
lll08l¶l0
ANGELIKA TASCHEN / [email protected]
LIVING IN PROVENCE
Barbara & René Stoeltie / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 26 x 30.2 cm
(10.2 x 11.9 in.), 200 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
INDIAN INTERIORS
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Sunil Sethi /
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.8 cm (7.7 x 10.1 in.), 320 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
COUNTRY INTERIORS
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Diane Dorrans
Saeks / Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 25.8 cm
(7.7 x 10.1 in.), 304 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
PARIS INTERIORS
Lisa Lovatt-Smith / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 25.8 cm (7.7 x 10.1 in.), 320 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
NEW YORK INTERIORS
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Beate Wedekind /
Hardcover, format: 19.6 x 25.8 cm
(7.7 x 10.1 in.), 288 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
LIVING IN MOROCCO
Barbara & René Stoeltie / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 26 x 30.2 cm
(10.2 x 11.9 in.), 280 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
LIVING IN MEXICO
Barbara & René Stoeltie / Ed. Angelika Taschen /
Hardcover, format: 26 x 30.2 cm (10.2 x 11.9 in.),
200 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
LIVING IN BALI
Photos: Reto Guntli / Anita Lococo /
Ed. Angelika Taschen / Hardcover, format:
26 x 30.2 cm (10.2 x 11.9 in.), 200 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
LIVING IN TUSCANY
Barbara &René Stoeltie / Ed. Angelika
Taschen / Hardcover, format: 26 x 30.2 cm
(10.2 x 11.9 in.), 180 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
“...luscious pictures that
burst with beautiful colours
and exotic features.”
—ASPIRE MAGAZINE, London, on Living in Mexico
“In einem ästhetisch und inhaltlich
sehr gelungenem Band sezieren
renommierte Wissenschaftler
und Journalisten das Thema der
käuflichen Schönheit.”
—SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG, Munich, on Aesthetic Surgery
| 84 | "ß M08l l0f 8߶0ß0 N00 l8ßl88l808 8000l l0f0Nl߶ lß l00lf 0f08f¶ ßlß0·
lll08l¶l0¬l00ß8
ANGELIKA TASCHEN / [email protected]
ICONS LIFESTYLE—ALL TITLES
Ed. Angelika Taschen
Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
AFRICAN STYLE
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen
GREECE STYLE
Photos: René Stoeltie
HAVANA STYLE
Photos: Gianni Basso/Vega MG
INDIAN STYLE
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen
LONDON STYLE
Photos: Simon Upton
MEXICO STYLE
Photos: René Stoeltie
MOROCCO STYLE NEW YORK STYLE PARIS STYLE
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen
PROVENCE STYLE SAFARI STYLE
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen
SEASIDE STYLE
Diane Dorrans Saeks
SOUTH AFRICAN STYLE
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen
SWEDEN STYLE SYDNEY STYLE
Photos: Giorgio Possenti/Vega MG
TUSCANY STYLE
BAMBOO STYLE
Photos: Reto Guntli
BERLIN STYLE
Photos: Eric Laignel, Patricia
Parinejad
CHINA STYLE
Photos: Reto Guntli
EGYPT STYLE
Photos: Deidi von Schaewen
“TASCHEN’s Icons series offers an image-rich
synthesis of a world, style or genre—angels,
rock covers, Provençal interiors, the digital
world—and does so in inexpensive pocket format.”
—SENSO, Paris
New! New!
New!
New!
"#00l0.¨—YOUR NEW HOME, London
l0·ll90 lll0 lß l00 0ll¶ 8ß0 00¶l߶ 8 10808ß 9lll8.¨—LUXURY INTERIORS MAGAZINE, Sydney, on Tuscany Style
PENGUIN. FRANS LANTING
Icons, Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
ROBERT DOISNEAU
Jean-Claude Gautrand / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
F00l0
WILLIAM CLAXTON. JAZZLIFE
Text: Joachim E. Berendt / Introduction: William Claxton /
Hardcover, CD, XXL-format: 29.1 x 40.7 cm (11.5 x 16 in.), 696 pp.
€ 150 / $ 200 / £ 100 / ¥ 25.000
STEVE MCQUEEN
William Claxton / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
KARL BLOSSFELDT
Hans Christian Adam / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 256 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
BRASSAÏ
Jean-Claude Gautrand / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 192 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
EDWARD S. CURTIS
Hans Christian Adam / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 240 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
MAN RAY
Emmanuelle de l’Ecotais / Ed. Manfred
Heiting / Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm
(7.7 x 9.6 in.), 224 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
Including
CD
HELMUT NEWTON
A GUN FOR HIRE
Ed. June Newton / Laminated cover,
format: 23 x 30.5 cm (9 x 12 in.), 216 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE FRENCHMAN
A photographic interview with Fernandel /
Introduction by Art Buchwald / Photos and
interview: Philippe Halsman / Hardcover,
format: 17.5 x 23.5 cm (6.9 x 9.2 in.), 108 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
DIANA, PRINCESS OF WALES
Photos: Mario Testino / Ed. Patrick
Kinmonth / Hardcover, format: 26.4 x 29.7 cm
(10.4 x 11.7 in.), 144 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
Book signing with William Claxton
at TASCHEN Store, Paris, 2005
XXL
Format
Helmut Newton at the TASCHEN
Bookstore in LA, January 9, 2004
SIMONE PHILIPPI / [email protected]
PIERRE ET GILLES. SAILORS & SEA
Icons, Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm
(5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
PHOTO ICONS. THE STORY BEHIND
THE PICTURES. VOL. 1
Hans-Michael Koetzle / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
PHOTO ICONS. THE STORY BEHIND
THE PICTURES. VOL. 2
Hans-Michael Koetzle / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
20TH CENTURY PHOTOGRAPHY
Museum Ludwig Cologne / Icons, Flexi-cover,
format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
€ 6.99 / $ 9.99 / £ 4.99 / ¥ 1.500
| 8ë | "10l8 l8 8 0ll8fl008 000k 8ß0 8ß l߶0ßl008 00ß00#l.¨—AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER, London, on The Frenchman
F00l0
SIMONE PHILIPPI /
[email protected]
WILLY RONIS
Jean-Claude Gautrand / Agence Rapho /
Flexi-cover, format: 23.1 x 28.9 cm
(9.1 x 11.3 in.), 192 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
EDWARD WESTON
Terence Pitts / Ed. Manfred Heiting / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.5 cm (7.7 x 9.6 in.), 224 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
WOLFGANG TILLMANS
truth study center
Minoru Shimizu / Ed. Wolfgang Tillmans /
Softcover, format: 22.5 x 30 cm
(8.8 x 11.8 in.), 220 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
THE POLAROID BOOK
Barbara Hitchcock / Ed. Steve Crist / Hardcover in
a silver foil, format: 17.5 x 21.5 cm (6.9 x 8.5 in.), 400 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
MRS. NEWTON
June Newton / Hardcover, format:
21 x 29.3 cm (8.5 x 11.5 in.), 264 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
HELMUT NEWTON
SEX AND LANDSCAPES
Ed. June Newton / Text: Philippe Garner /
Hardcover, format: 24.5 x 32.5 cm
(9.6 x 12.8 in.), 112 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
HELMUT NEWTON
WORK
Text: Françoise Marquet / Ed. Manfred
Heiting / Hardcover, format: 24 x 31 cm
(9.4 x 12.2 in.), 280 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 24.99 / ¥ 5.900
SIEFF
Jeanloup Sieff / Hardcover, format:
25.5 x 34.6 cm (10 x 13.6 in.), 288 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 24.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
New!
Special
Edition
Special
Price
UWE OMMER. TRANSIT
AROUND THE WORLD IN 1000 FAMILIES
Uwe Ommer / Hardcover, format: 29 x 29 cm
(11.4 x 11.4 in.), 720 pp.
€ 49.99 / $ 59.99 / £ 34.99 / ¥ 8.900
TERRY RICHARDSON. TERRYWORLD
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover,
format: 26 x 34 cm (10.2 x 13.4 in.), 288 pp.
€ 49.99 / $ 59.99 / £ 34.99 / ¥ 8.900
"ß 000k 0l l00 008l 800l8 lf0M 00f llß8l #00l0 8088l0ß.¨—SUNDAY POST, DUNDEE, on Diana, Princess of Wales
F0# 00ll0f0
JIM HEIMANN / [email protected]
JULIUS WIEDEMANN / [email protected]
THE PLAYBOY BOOK. 50 YEARS
Gretchen Edgren / Introduction: Hugh M.
Hefner / Revised edition, Hardcover, 2 fold-outs,
format: 22.8 x 30 cm (9 x 11.8 in.), 464 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
THE PLAYMATE BOOK. 50 YEARS
Gretchen Edgren / Introduction: Hugh M.
Hefner / Revised edition, Hardcover, format:
22.8 x 30 cm (9 x 11.8 in.), 472 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
“An interesting read, and
a surprisingly wholesome one....”
—KNAVE, London, on Playmate
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 20s
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 640 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ALL-AMERICAN ADS 1900-1919
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 640 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 70s
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 704 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 30s
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 768 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 60s
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 960 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
MEN’S ADVENTURE MAGAZINES
IN POSTWAR AMERICA
Rich Oberg, Max Allan Collins, George
Hagenauer, Steven Heller / Hardcover, format:
19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 512 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 40s
W. R. Wilkerson III / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-
cover, format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 768 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 80s
Steven Heller / Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 608 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
New!
ALL-AMERICAN ADS OF THE 50s
Ed. Jim Heimann / Flexi-cover, format: 19.6 x
25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 928 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
TASCHEN Store Los Angeles, September
2005: Hugh Hefner with Holly, Bridget and
Kendra at the book signing of Playmate
Book. 50 Years
THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BILL
WARD, KING OF THE GLAMOUR GIRLS
Eric Kroll / Hardcover, format: 26 x 34 cm
(10.2 x 13.4 in.), 344 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
S
O
L
D
O
U
T
ADVERTISING NOW. PRINT
Ed. Julius Wiedemann / Flexi-cover,
format: 19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.6 x 9.8 in.), 640 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
New!
| 88 | "#00l0.¨—YOUR NEW HOME, London
| 88 | "0ß00 8¶8lß, 1ß$08l8 kß00k8 ll8 #00ll80l߶ fl98l8 8lf8l¶0l 00Nß Nll0
F0# 00ll0f0¬l00ß8
JIM HEIMANN / [email protected]
JULIUS WIEDEMANN / [email protected]
ICONS POP CULTURE—ALL TITLES
Flexi-cover, format: 14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 192 pp.
08lf 6 ë.99 l $ 9.99
£ 4.99 l f 1.â00
ALL-AMERICAN ADS 50s
Ed. Jim Heimann
HALLOWEEN
Ed. Jim Heimann
HOT RODS & CUSTOM CARS
Coco Shinomiya
INDIA BAZAAR
Kajri Jain / Eds. Samantha Harrison,
Bari Kumar
JAPANESE BEAUTIES
Ed. Jim Heimann
KRAZY KIDS’ FOOD!
Steve Roden and Dan Godsell
CLASSIC ROCK COVERS
Michael Ochs
SIGNS
Colors
SURFING
Ed. Jim Heimann
TATTOOS
Henk Schiffmacher
TIKI STYLE
Sven A. Kirsten
VALENTINES
Ed. Jim Heimann
ALL-AMERICAN ADS 60s
Ed. Jim Heimann
50s CARS
Ed. Jim Heimann
60s CARS
Ed. Jim Heimann
70s CARS
Ed. Jim Heimann
“Un petit bijou
kitsch et nostalgique.”
—SPORT, Paris, on Surfing
“This delightful collection of
20th century cards show that
romance and cheesiness have
always made the perfect match.”
—SUNDAY TELEGRAPH, London, on Valentines
“Endless inspiration and fun makes this
newest addition to TASCHEN’s Icons series
a visual necessity.”
—FLAUNT, Los Angeles, on Krazy Kids’ Food
New!
New!
l0080 0l8l0fl08l 00M#0ß0l0M8 0l M0ß`8 #0fl00l08l8.¨—ARENA, London, on The History of Men’s Magazines
$0K
ßll llll08
ß00ll8 0ßl¶
“...a grand master of
the erotic cinema.”
—PENTHOUSE, London, on Roy Stuart
ROY STUART. VOL. 3
Preface: Alison Castle / Flexi-cover, format:
18.4 x 24.5 cm (7.2 x 9.6 in.), 240 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
TOM OF FINLAND
Micha Ramakas / Flexi-cover, format:
19.6 x 25.5 cm (7.7 x 10 in.), 352 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
NATACHA MERRITT. DIGITAL DIARIES
Flexi-cover, format: 16.5 x 22.3 cm
(6.5 x 8.8 in.), 256 pp.
€ 14.99 / $ 19.99 / £ 9.99 / ¥ 2.900
THE HISTORY OF MEN’S MAGAZINES.
VOL. 1: 1900 TO POST-WW II
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover, format:
21.3 x 27.7 cm (8.4 x 10.9 in.), 460 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
THE HISTORY OF MEN’S MAGAZINES.
VOL. 2: POST-WW II TO 1959
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover, format:
21.3 x 27.7 cm (8.4 x 10.9 in.), 460 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
THE HISTORY OF MEN’S MAGAZINES.
VOL. 3: 1960s AT THE NEWSSTAND
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover, format:
21.3 x 27.7 cm (8.4 x 10.9 in.), 460 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
THE HISTORY OF MEN’S MAGAZINES.
VOL. 4: 1960s UNDER THE COUNTER
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover, format:
21.3 x 27.7 cm (8.4 x 10.9 in.), 460 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
THE HISTORY OF MEN’S MAGAZINES.
VOL. 5: 1970s AT THE NEWSSTAND
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover, format:
21.3 x 27.7 cm (8.4 x 10.9 in.), 460 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
THE HISTORY OF MEN’S MAGAZINES.
VOL. 6: 1970s UNDER THE COUNTER
Ed. Dian Hanson / Hardcover, format:
21.3 x 27.7 cm (8.4 x 10.9 in.), 460 pp.
€ 39.99 / $ 49.99 / £ 29.99 / ¥ 6.900
ROY STUART. THE FOURTH BODY
Preface: Dian Hanson / Hardcover, book + DVD,
format: 23.8 x 30.2 cm (9.3 x 11.9 in.), 280 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
TOM OF FINLAND. COMIC COLLECTION
Ed. Dian Hanson / Flexi-cover, 5 volumes in a
slipcase, format: 9.7 x 14 cm (3.8 x 5.5 in.), 960 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
ARAKI. TOKYO LUCKY HOLE
Nobuyoshi Araki / Flexi-cover, format:
14 x 19.5 cm (5.5 x 7.7 in.), 708 pp.
€ 19.99 / $ 29.99 / £ 14.99 / ¥ 3.900
TOM POULTON.
THE SECRET ART OF AN ENGLISH
GENTLEMAN
Ed. Dian Hanson / Jamie Maclean / Hardcover,
format: 21 x 29.3 cm (8.3 x 11.5 in.), 224 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
New!
THE ROY STUART COLLECTION
Dian Hanson / 5 volumes in a slipcase, format:
9.7 x 14 cm (3.8 x 5.5 in.), 960 pp.
€ 29.99 / $ 39.99 / £ 19.99 / ¥ 5.900
New!
S
O
L
D
O
U
T
DIAN HANSON / [email protected]
ERIC KROLL / [email protected]
Including
DVD
| 90 | "100 1ß$08l8 000k8l0f0 l8 8 M08l·800. . ll`8 f08ll¶ 0080lll0l 8ß0
All photos: TASCHEN Store
Los Angeles. Design Philippe Starck,
Photos © Tim Street-Porter
8lf8߶0 8ß0 M000fß lß8l00.¨—Michael Stipe of R.E.M on his favorite places in Paris
1ß$08l8 $l0f08
ß0f0880ß
lM#f0880M
NYSOHO
SUMMER 2006
ON GREENE STREET
Text: Alison Castle, Paris
Design: Sense/Net, Andy Disl & Birgit Reber, Cologne
Coordination: Annick Volk, Cologne
Production: Tina Ciborowius, Claudia Frey, Cologne
Printed in Germany, ISBN 3–8228–2593–X
Front cover: Richard Phillips, $, 2004, oil on linen,
274.3 x 215.9 cm (108 x 85 in.). Courtesy of Gagosian
Gallery, New York. From the book Collecting Contemporary
Back cover: Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled, 2001, wax
and fabric, figure: height 150 cm (59 in.), manhole:
60 x 40 cm (23
5
⁄8 x 15
3
⁄4 in.). Courtesy of Marian Goodman
Gallery, New York. From the book Collecting Contemporary
OFFICES
TASCHEN
America
6671 Sunset Boulevard,
Suite 1508, USA–Los
Angeles, CA 90028
Tel: +1-323-463 4441,
Fax: +1-323-463 4442,
[email protected]
TASCHEN
Deutschland
Hohenzollernring 53,
D–50672 Köln
Tel: +49-221-201 80 170,
Fax: +49-221-201 80 42,
[email protected]
TASCHEN
España
c/ Victor Hugo, 1, 2°
Dcha., E–28004 Madrid
Tel: +34-91-360 50 63,
Fax: +34-91-360 50 64,
[email protected]
TASCHEN
France
82, rue Mazarine,
F–75006 Paris
Tel: +33-1-40 51 70 93,
Fax: +33-1-43 26 73 80,
[email protected]
TASCHEN
Hong Kong
27/F, The Workst@tion,
43 Lyndhurst Terrace,
HK–Central Hong Kong
Tel: +852 25448018,
Fax: +852 25448012,
[email protected]
TASCHEN
Japan
Atelier Ark Building, 5-
11-23 Minami Aoyama,
Minato-ku, Tokyo,
107-0062, Japan,
Tel: +81-3-5778-3000,
Fax: +81-3-5778-3030,
[email protected]
TASCHEN
UK
5th Floor, 1 Heathcock
Court, 415 Strand,
GB–London WC2R 0NS
Tel:+44-20-7845 8585,
Fax: +44-20-7836 3696,
[email protected]
HEADQUARTERS
TASCHEN GmbH
Hohenzollernring 53,
D–50672 Köln
Tel: +49-221-201 800,
Fax: +49-221-25 49 19,
[email protected]
STORES
Cologne
Hohenzollernring 28,
D–50672 Köln
Tel: +49-221-257 33 04,
Fax: +49-221-25 49 68,
[email protected]
Los Angeles
354 North Beverly
Drive, USA–Beverly
Hills, CA 90210
Tel: +1-310-274 4300,
Fax: +1-310-274 4040,
[email protected]
New York
107 Greene Street,
USA–NY 10012
Tel: +1-212-226 2212,
Fax: +1-212-226 2218,
[email protected]
Paris
2, rue de Buci,
F–75006 Paris
Tel: +33-1-40 51 79 22,
Fax: +33-1-43 26 73 80,
[email protected]
Warehouse Sale!
Thousands of slightly damaged and
display copies from TASCHEN on sale
at bargain basement prices, 50-75% off
for 3 days only:
in Los Angeles and Paris: July, 23–25th
2006, in Cologne: July, 22nd–24th 2006
For details please visit www.taschen.com.
“Controversial,
glamorous and
sexy.”—PHOTO DISTRICT NEWS, New York
NNN.l88000ß.00M

Sponsor Documents

Or use your account on DocShare.tips

Hide

Forgot your password?

Or register your new account on DocShare.tips

Hide

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link to create a new password.

Back to log-in

Close